Impact of exhaust emissions on chemical snowpack composition at Concordia Station, Antarctica
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Published:2020-01-23
Issue:1
Volume:14
Page:199-209
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ISSN:1994-0424
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Container-title:The Cryosphere
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language:en
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Short-container-title:The Cryosphere
Author:
Helmig Detlev, Liptzin Daniel, Hueber Jacques, Savarino JoelORCID
Abstract
Abstract. The chemistry of reactive gases inside the snowpack and in the lower
atmosphere was investigated at Concordia Station (Dome C), Antarctica, from
December 2012 to January 2014. Measured species included ozone, nitrogen
oxides, gaseous elemental mercury (GEM), and formaldehyde, for study of
photochemical reactions, surface exchange, and the seasonal cycles and
atmospheric chemistry of these gases. The experiment was installed ≈1 km from the station main infrastructure inside the station clean air
sector and within the station electrical power grid boundary. Ambient air
was sampled continuously from inlets mounted above the surface on a 10 m
meteorological tower. In addition, snowpack air was collected at 30 cm
intervals to 1.2 m depth from two manifolds that had both above- and below-surface sampling inlets. Despite being in the clean air sector, over the
course of the 1.2-year study, we observed on the order of 50 occasions when
exhaust plumes from the camp, most notably from the power generation system,
were transported to the study site. Continuous monitoring of nitrogen oxides
(NOx) provided a measurement of a chemical tracer for exhaust plumes.
Highly elevated levels of NOx (up to 1000 × background) and lowered
ozone (down to ≈50 %), most likely from reaction of ozone with nitric
oxide, were measured in air from above and within the snowpack. Within 5–15 min from observing elevated pollutant levels above the snow, rapidly
increasing and long-lasting concentration enhancements were measured in
snowpack air. While pollution events typically lasted only a few minutes to
an hour above the snow surface, elevated NOx levels were observed in
the snowpack lasting from a few days to ≈ 1 week. GEM and
formaldehyde measurements were less sensitive and covered a shorter
measurement period; neither of these species' data showed noticeable
concentration changes during these events that were above the normal
variability seen in the data. Nonetheless, the clarity of the NOx and
ozone observations adds important new insight into the discussion of if and how
snow photochemical experiments within reach of the power grid of polar
research sites are possibly compromised by the snowpack being chemically
influenced (contaminated) by gaseous and particulate emissions from the
research camp activities. This question is critical for evaluating if
snowpack trace chemical measurements from within the camp boundaries are
representative for the vast polar ice sheets.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
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