Emission location dependent ozone depletion potentials for very short-lived halogenated species

Pisso, I; Haynes, PH; Law, KS

HERO ID

1728197

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2010

HERO ID 1728197
In Press No
Year 2010
Title Emission location dependent ozone depletion potentials for very short-lived halogenated species
Authors Pisso, I; Haynes, PH; Law, KS
Journal Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Volume 10
Issue 24
Page Numbers 12025-12036
Abstract We present trajectory-based estimates of Ozone Depletion Potentials (ODPs) for very short-lived halogenated source gases as a function of surface emission location. The ODPs are determined by the fraction of source gas and its degradation products which reach the stratosphere, depending primarily on tropospheric transport and chemistry, and the effect of the resulting reactive halogen in the stratosphere, which is determined by stratospheric transport and chemistry, in particular by stratospheric residence time. Reflecting the different timescales and physico-chemical processes in the troposphere and stratosphere, the estimates are based on calculation of separate ensembles of trajectories for the troposphere and stratosphere. A methodology is described by which information from the two ensembles can be combined to give the ODPs. <br> <br>The ODP estimates for a species with a fixed 20 d life-time, representing a compound like n-propyl bromide, are presented as an example. The estimated ODPs show strong geographical and seasonal variation, particularly within the tropics. The values of the ODPs are sensitive to the inclusion of a convective parametrization in the trajectory calculations, but the relative spatial and seasonal variation is not. The results imply that ODPs are largest for emissions from south and south-east Asia during Northern Hemisphere summer and from the western Pacific during Northern Hemisphere winter. Large ODPs are also estimated for emissions throughout the tropics with non-negligible values also extending into northern mid-latitudes, particularly in the summer. These first estimates, whilst made under some simplifying assumptions, show larger ODPs for certain emission regions, particularly south Asia in NH summer, than have typically been reported by previous studies which used emissions distributed evenly over land surfaces.
Doi 10.5194/acp-10-12025-2010
Wosid WOS:000285581000003
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Comments Source: Web of Science WOS:000285581000003
Is Public Yes