Supplemental data: A global atmospheric chemistry model for the fate and transport of PFCAs and their precursors

Thackray, CP; Selin, NE; Young, CJ

HERO ID

6589940

Reference Type

Journal Article

Subtype

Supplemental Data

Year

2020

Language

English

HERO ID 6589940
Material Type Supplemental Data
In Press No
Year 2020
Title Supplemental data: A global atmospheric chemistry model for the fate and transport of PFCAs and their precursors
Authors Thackray, CP; Selin, NE; Young, CJ
Journal Environmental Science: Processes & Impacts
Volume 22
Issue 2
Abstract Perfluorocarboxylic acids (PFCAs) are environmental contaminants that are highly persistent, and many are bio-accumulative and have been detected along with their atmospheric precursors far from emission sources. The overall importance of precursor emissions as an indirect source of PFCAs to the environment is uncertain. Previous studies have estimated the atmospheric source of PFCAs using models and degradation pathways of differing complexities, leading to quantitatively different results. We present results from simulations of atmospheric PFCA formation and fate using the chemical transport model GEOS-Chem. We simulate the most up-to-date chemistry available to our knowledge for the degradation of the precursors fluorotelomer alcohol (FTOH), fluorotelomer olefin (FTO), and fluorotelomer iodide (FTI), as well as the deposition and transport of the precursors, intermediates and end-products of the formation chemistry. We calculate yields of C3-C13 PFCAs formed from 4 : 2 to 12 : 2 fluorotelomer precursors and their deposition to the surface. We find that the ratio of long-chain to short-chain PFCAs increases strongly with distance from source regions. We compare our model results to remote deposition measurements and mid-latitude rainwater measurements. The model captures the observed relationship between rainwater abundance and PFCA chain length, as well as the average deposition rates at mid-latitude and Arctic sites, but underestimates the deposition of PFDoA, PFDA, and TFA at mid-latitudes and PFNA at the Devon Ice Cap. We provide estimates of cumulative PFCA deposition globally. We find that given the most recent emission inventory, the atmospheric source of PFCAs is 6-185 tonnes per year globally and 0.1-2.1 tonnes per year to the Arctic.
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword Environmental Studies; Latitude; Iodides; Atmospheric chemistry; Deposition; Emission; Chemistry; Contaminants; Polar environments; Degradation; Computer simulation; Organic chemistry; Intermediates; Rain water; Emission inventories; Atmospheric models; Chemical transport; Precursors; Biodegradation; Emissions; Arctic region
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