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Tytuł pozycji:

Impact of northern hemisphere mid-latitude anthropogenic sulfur dioxide emissions on local and remote tropospheric oxidants.

Tytuł:
Impact of northern hemisphere mid-latitude anthropogenic sulfur dioxide emissions on local and remote tropospheric oxidants.
Autorzy:
Westervelt, Daniel M.
Fiore, Arlene M.
Baublitz, Colleen B.
Correa, Gustavo
Źródło:
Atmospheric Chemistry & Physics Discussions; 1/5/2021, p1-19, 19p
Czasopismo naukowe
The unintended consequences of reductions in regional anthropogenic sulfur dioxide (SO2) emissions implemented to protect human health are poorly understood. SO2 decreases began in the 1970s in the US and Europe and are expected to continue into the future, while recent emissions decreases in China are also projected to continue. In addition to the well documented climate effects (warming) from reducing aerosols, tropospheric oxidation is impacted via aerosol modification of photolysis rates and radical sinks. Impacts on the hydroxyl radical and other trace constituents directly affect climate and air quality metrics such as surface ozone levels. We use the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory Atmospheric Model version 3 nudged towards National Centers for Environmental Prediction (NCEP) reanalysis wind velocities to estimate the impact of SO2 emissions from the United States, Europe, and China by differencing a control simulation with an otherwise identical simulation in which 2015 anthropogenic SO2 emissions are set to zero over one of the regions. Springtime sulfate aerosol changes occur both locally to the emission region and also throughout the Northern Hemispheric troposphere, including remote oceanic regions and the Arctic. The presence of sulfate aerosol strongly reduces hydroxyl (OH) and hydroperoxy (HO2) radicals by up to 10 % year-round throughout most of the troposphere north of 30° N latitude, the latter of which is directly removed via heterogeneous chemistry on aerosol surfaces, including sulfate, in the model. Regional SO2 emissions significantly increase nitrogen oxides (NOx) by about 5-8 % throughout most of the free troposphere in the Northern hemisphere by increasing the NOx lifetime as the heterogeneous sink on sulfate aerosol declines. Despite the NOx increases, tropospheric ozone decreases at northern mid-latitudes by 1-4 % zonally averaged and by up to 5 ppbv in surface air over China, as its response is dominated by the larger decreases (up to 2x) in HO2 and OH. Since 2015 anthropogenic SO2 emissions in China exceed those in the US or Europe, the oxidative response is greatest for the China perturbation simulation. Chemical effects of aerosols on oxidation (reactive uptake) dominate over radiative effects (photolysis rates), the latter of which are only statistically significant locally for the large perturbation over China. We find that the emissions decrease in China, which has yet to be fully realized, will have the largest impact on oxidants and related species in the Northern Hemisphere free troposphere compared to changes in Europe or the USA. Our results bolster previous calls for a multipollutant strategy for air pollution mitigation, to avoid the unintended consequence of aerosol removal leading to surface ozone increases that offset or mask surface ozone gains achieved by regulation of other pollutants, especially in countries where current usage of high-sulfur emitting fuels may be phased out in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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