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Photocatalytic chlorine atom production on mineral dust-sea spray aerosols over the North Atlantic. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Active chlorine in the atmosphere affects methane oxidation, leading to uncertainty in methane budget assessments globally due to limited understanding of its production and role.
  • A new photocatalytic mechanism suggests chlorine atoms are produced when Sahara dust interacts with sea spray aerosol, validated through modeling and explaining long-standing observations of carbon depletion in air samples from Barbados and the CO:ethane ratio at Cape Verde.
  • Increased chlorine production, particularly in the North Atlantic, alters methane budget models and can lead to miscalculations in methane emissions from biological sources like agriculture and wetlands, complicating our understanding of recent methane increases linked to North African dust emissions.

Article Abstract

Active chlorine in the atmosphere is poorly constrained and so is its role in the oxidation of the potent greenhouse gas methane, causing uncertainty in global methane budgets. We propose a photocatalytic mechanism for chlorine atom production that occurs when Sahara dust mixes with sea spray aerosol. The mechanism is validated by implementation in a global atmospheric model and thereby explaining the episodic, seasonal, and location-dependent C depletion in CO in air samples from Barbados [J.E. Mak, G. Kra, T. Sandomenico, P. Bergamaschi, (2003)], which remained unexplained for decades. The production of Cl can also explain the anomaly in the CO:ethane ratio found at Cape Verde [K. A. Read et al., (2009)], in addition to explaining the observation of elevated HOCl [M. J. Lawler et al., , 7617-7628 (2011)]. Our model finds that 3.8 Tg(Cl) y is produced over the North Atlantic, making it the dominant source of chlorine in the region; globally, chlorine production increases by 41%. The shift in the methane sink budget due to the increased role of Cl means that isotope-constrained top-down models fail to allocate 12 Tg y (2% of total methane emissions) to C-depleted biological sources such as agriculture and wetlands. Since 2014, an increase in North African dust emissions has increased the C isotope of atmospheric CH, thereby partially masking a much greater decline in this isotope, which has implications for the interpretation of the drivers behind the recent increase of methane in the atmosphere.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10400977PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2303974120DOI Listing

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