A seasonal analysis of aerosol NO3− sources and NOx oxidation pathways in the Southern Ocean marine boundary layer
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Published:2023-05-22
Issue:10
Volume:23
Page:5605-5622
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ISSN:1680-7324
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Container-title:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Chem. Phys.
Author:
Burger Jessica M.,Joyce Emily,Hastings Meredith G.,Spence Kurt A. M.,Altieri Katye E.
Abstract
Abstract. Nitrogen oxides, collectively referred to as NOx (NO + NO2), are an important component of atmospheric chemistry involved in
the production and destruction of various oxidants that contribute to the
oxidative capacity of the troposphere. The primary sink for NOx is
atmospheric nitrate, which has an influence on climate and the
biogeochemical cycling of reactive nitrogen. NOx sources and NOx-to-NO3- formation pathways remain poorly constrained in the remote
marine boundary layer of the Southern Ocean, particularly outside of
the more frequently sampled summer months. This study presents seasonally
resolved measurements of the isotopic composition (δ15N,
δ18O, and Δ17O) of atmospheric nitrate in coarse-mode (> 1 µm) aerosols, collected between South Africa and
the sea ice edge in summer, winter, and spring. Similar latitudinal trends in δ15N–NO3- were observed in summer and spring,
suggesting similar NOx sources. Based on δ15N–NO3-, the main NOx sources were likely a
combination of lightning, biomass burning, and/or soil emissions at the low
latitudes, as well as oceanic alkyl nitrates and snowpack emissions from
continental Antarctica or the sea ice at the mid-latitudes and high latitudes,
respectively. Snowpack emissions associated with photolysis were derived
from both the Antarctic snowpack and snow on sea ice. A
combination of natural NOx sources, likely transported from the lower-latitude Atlantic, contribute to the background-level NO3- observed
in winter, with the potential for a stratospheric NO3- source evidenced by one sample of Antarctic origin. Greater values of δ18O–NO3- in
spring and winter compared to summer suggest an increased influence of
oxidation pathways that incorporate oxygen atoms from O3 into the end
product NO3- (i.e. N2O5, DMS, and halogen oxides (XO)). Significant linear relationships between δ18O and Δ17O suggest isotopic mixing between H2O(v) and O3 in winter and isotopic mixing between H2O(v) and O3/XO in
spring. The onset of sunlight in spring, coupled with large sea ice extent, can activate chlorine chemistry with the potential to increase peroxy radical concentrations, contributing to oxidant chemistry in the marine boundary layer. As a result, isotopic mixing with an additional third end-member (atmospheric O2) occurs in spring.
Funder
University of Cape Town National Research Foundation Horizon 2020 Framework Programme
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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