Sulfate Aerosols from Non-Explosive Volcanoes: Chemical-Radiative Effects in the Troposphere and Lower Stratosphere

SO2 and H2S are the two most important gas-phase sulfur species emitted by volcanoes, with a global amount from non-explosive emissions of the order 10 Tg-S/yr. These gases are readily oxidized forming SO42− aerosols, which effectively scatter the incoming solar radiation and cool the surface. They...

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Main Authors: Giovanni Pitari, Daniele Visioni, Eva Mancini, Irene Cionni, Glauco Di Genova, Ilaria Gandolfi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2016-06-01
Series:Atmosphere
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4433/7/7/85
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spelling doaj-f3bbd53f6cf54099afbac846b4ca9c322020-11-24T20:40:39ZengMDPI AGAtmosphere2073-44332016-06-01778510.3390/atmos7070085atmos7070085Sulfate Aerosols from Non-Explosive Volcanoes: Chemical-Radiative Effects in the Troposphere and Lower StratosphereGiovanni Pitari0Daniele Visioni1Eva Mancini2Irene Cionni3Glauco Di Genova4Ilaria Gandolfi5Department of Physical and Chemical Sciences, Università dell’Aquila, 67100 L’Aquila, ItalyDepartment of Physical and Chemical Sciences, Università dell’Aquila, 67100 L’Aquila, ItalyDepartment of Physical and Chemical Sciences, Università dell’Aquila, 67100 L’Aquila, ItalyEnea, Ente per le Nuove Tecnologie, l’Energia e l’Ambiente, 00123 Roma, ItalyDepartment of Physical and Chemical Sciences, Università dell’Aquila, 67100 L’Aquila, ItalyDepartment of Physical and Chemical Sciences, Università dell’Aquila, 67100 L’Aquila, ItalySO2 and H2S are the two most important gas-phase sulfur species emitted by volcanoes, with a global amount from non-explosive emissions of the order 10 Tg-S/yr. These gases are readily oxidized forming SO42− aerosols, which effectively scatter the incoming solar radiation and cool the surface. They also perturb atmospheric chemistry by enhancing the NOx to HNO3 heterogeneous conversion via hydrolysis on the aerosol surface of N2O5 and Br-Cl nitrates. This reduces formation of tropospheric O3 and the OH to HO2 ratio, thus limiting the oxidation of CH4 and increasing its lifetime. In addition to this tropospheric chemistry perturbation, there is also an impact on the NOx heterogeneous chemistry in the lower stratosphere, due to vertical transport of volcanic SO2 up to the tropical tropopause layer. Furthermore, the stratospheric O3 formation and loss, as well as the NOx budget, may be slightly affected by the additional amount of upward diffused solar radiation and consequent increase of photolysis rates. Two multi-decadal time-slice runs of a climate-chemistry-aerosol model have been designed for studying these chemical-radiative effects. A tropopause mean global net radiative flux change (RF) of −0.23 W·m−2 is calculated (including direct and indirect aerosol effects) with a 14% increase of the global mean sulfate aerosol optical depth. A 5–15 ppt NOx decrease is found in the mid-troposphere subtropics and mid-latitudes and also from pole to pole in the lower stratosphere. The tropospheric NOx perturbation triggers a column O3 decrease of 0.5–1.5 DU and a 1.1% increase of the CH4 lifetime. The surface cooling induced by solar radiation scattering by the volcanic aerosols induces a tropospheric stabilization with reduced updraft velocities that produce ice supersaturation conditions in the upper troposphere. A global mean 0.9% decrease of the cirrus ice optical depth is calculated with an indirect RF of −0.08 W·m−2.http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4433/7/7/85climate-chemistry-aerosol modelnon-explosive volcanic eruptionsatmospheric sulfur budgetsulfate aerosolsaerosol chemical-radiative effectsupper tropospheric ice particles
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Giovanni Pitari
Daniele Visioni
Eva Mancini
Irene Cionni
Glauco Di Genova
Ilaria Gandolfi
spellingShingle Giovanni Pitari
Daniele Visioni
Eva Mancini
Irene Cionni
Glauco Di Genova
Ilaria Gandolfi
Sulfate Aerosols from Non-Explosive Volcanoes: Chemical-Radiative Effects in the Troposphere and Lower Stratosphere
Atmosphere
climate-chemistry-aerosol model
non-explosive volcanic eruptions
atmospheric sulfur budget
sulfate aerosols
aerosol chemical-radiative effects
upper tropospheric ice particles
author_facet Giovanni Pitari
Daniele Visioni
Eva Mancini
Irene Cionni
Glauco Di Genova
Ilaria Gandolfi
author_sort Giovanni Pitari
title Sulfate Aerosols from Non-Explosive Volcanoes: Chemical-Radiative Effects in the Troposphere and Lower Stratosphere
title_short Sulfate Aerosols from Non-Explosive Volcanoes: Chemical-Radiative Effects in the Troposphere and Lower Stratosphere
title_full Sulfate Aerosols from Non-Explosive Volcanoes: Chemical-Radiative Effects in the Troposphere and Lower Stratosphere
title_fullStr Sulfate Aerosols from Non-Explosive Volcanoes: Chemical-Radiative Effects in the Troposphere and Lower Stratosphere
title_full_unstemmed Sulfate Aerosols from Non-Explosive Volcanoes: Chemical-Radiative Effects in the Troposphere and Lower Stratosphere
title_sort sulfate aerosols from non-explosive volcanoes: chemical-radiative effects in the troposphere and lower stratosphere
publisher MDPI AG
series Atmosphere
issn 2073-4433
publishDate 2016-06-01
description SO2 and H2S are the two most important gas-phase sulfur species emitted by volcanoes, with a global amount from non-explosive emissions of the order 10 Tg-S/yr. These gases are readily oxidized forming SO42− aerosols, which effectively scatter the incoming solar radiation and cool the surface. They also perturb atmospheric chemistry by enhancing the NOx to HNO3 heterogeneous conversion via hydrolysis on the aerosol surface of N2O5 and Br-Cl nitrates. This reduces formation of tropospheric O3 and the OH to HO2 ratio, thus limiting the oxidation of CH4 and increasing its lifetime. In addition to this tropospheric chemistry perturbation, there is also an impact on the NOx heterogeneous chemistry in the lower stratosphere, due to vertical transport of volcanic SO2 up to the tropical tropopause layer. Furthermore, the stratospheric O3 formation and loss, as well as the NOx budget, may be slightly affected by the additional amount of upward diffused solar radiation and consequent increase of photolysis rates. Two multi-decadal time-slice runs of a climate-chemistry-aerosol model have been designed for studying these chemical-radiative effects. A tropopause mean global net radiative flux change (RF) of −0.23 W·m−2 is calculated (including direct and indirect aerosol effects) with a 14% increase of the global mean sulfate aerosol optical depth. A 5–15 ppt NOx decrease is found in the mid-troposphere subtropics and mid-latitudes and also from pole to pole in the lower stratosphere. The tropospheric NOx perturbation triggers a column O3 decrease of 0.5–1.5 DU and a 1.1% increase of the CH4 lifetime. The surface cooling induced by solar radiation scattering by the volcanic aerosols induces a tropospheric stabilization with reduced updraft velocities that produce ice supersaturation conditions in the upper troposphere. A global mean 0.9% decrease of the cirrus ice optical depth is calculated with an indirect RF of −0.08 W·m−2.
topic climate-chemistry-aerosol model
non-explosive volcanic eruptions
atmospheric sulfur budget
sulfate aerosols
aerosol chemical-radiative effects
upper tropospheric ice particles
url http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4433/7/7/85
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