Stratospheric ozone chemistry in the Antarctic: what determines the lowest ozone values reached and their recovery?

Balloon-borne observations of ozone from the South Pole Station have been reported to reach ozone mixing ratios below the detection limit of about 10 ppbv at the 70 hPa level by late September. After reaching a minimum, ozone mixing ratios increase to above 1 ppmv on the 70 hPa level by late Decembe...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: J.-U. Grooß, K. Brautzsch, R. Pommrich, S. Solomon, R. Müller
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2011-12-01
Series:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Online Access:http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/11/12217/2011/acp-11-12217-2011.pdf
id doaj-16559f487cf746ba828b3e7360b91e2c
record_format Article
spelling doaj-16559f487cf746ba828b3e7360b91e2c2020-11-25T00:18:40ZengCopernicus PublicationsAtmospheric Chemistry and Physics1680-73161680-73242011-12-011123122171222610.5194/acp-11-12217-2011Stratospheric ozone chemistry in the Antarctic: what determines the lowest ozone values reached and their recovery?J.-U. GrooßK. BrautzschR. PommrichS. SolomonR. MüllerBalloon-borne observations of ozone from the South Pole Station have been reported to reach ozone mixing ratios below the detection limit of about 10 ppbv at the 70 hPa level by late September. After reaching a minimum, ozone mixing ratios increase to above 1 ppmv on the 70 hPa level by late December. While the basic mechanisms causing the ozone hole have been known for more than 20 yr, the detailed chemical processes determining how low the local concentration can fall, and how it recovers from the minimum have not been explored so far. Both of these aspects are investigated here by analysing results from the Chemical Lagrangian Model of the Stratosphere (CLaMS). As ozone falls below about 0.5 ppmv, a balance is maintained by gas phase production of both HCl and HOCl followed by heterogeneous reaction between these two compounds in these simulations. Thereafter, a very rapid, irreversible chlorine deactivation into HCl can occur, either when ozone drops to values low enough for gas phase HCl production to exceed chlorine activation processes or when temperatures increase above the polar stratospheric cloud (PSC) threshold. As a consequence, the timing and mixing ratio of the minimum ozone depends sensitively on model parameters, including the ozone initialisation. The subsequent ozone increase between October and December is linked mainly to photochemical ozone production, caused by oxygen photolysis and by the oxidation of carbon monoxide and methane.http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/11/12217/2011/acp-11-12217-2011.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author J.-U. Grooß
K. Brautzsch
R. Pommrich
S. Solomon
R. Müller
spellingShingle J.-U. Grooß
K. Brautzsch
R. Pommrich
S. Solomon
R. Müller
Stratospheric ozone chemistry in the Antarctic: what determines the lowest ozone values reached and their recovery?
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
author_facet J.-U. Grooß
K. Brautzsch
R. Pommrich
S. Solomon
R. Müller
author_sort J.-U. Grooß
title Stratospheric ozone chemistry in the Antarctic: what determines the lowest ozone values reached and their recovery?
title_short Stratospheric ozone chemistry in the Antarctic: what determines the lowest ozone values reached and their recovery?
title_full Stratospheric ozone chemistry in the Antarctic: what determines the lowest ozone values reached and their recovery?
title_fullStr Stratospheric ozone chemistry in the Antarctic: what determines the lowest ozone values reached and their recovery?
title_full_unstemmed Stratospheric ozone chemistry in the Antarctic: what determines the lowest ozone values reached and their recovery?
title_sort stratospheric ozone chemistry in the antarctic: what determines the lowest ozone values reached and their recovery?
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
issn 1680-7316
1680-7324
publishDate 2011-12-01
description Balloon-borne observations of ozone from the South Pole Station have been reported to reach ozone mixing ratios below the detection limit of about 10 ppbv at the 70 hPa level by late September. After reaching a minimum, ozone mixing ratios increase to above 1 ppmv on the 70 hPa level by late December. While the basic mechanisms causing the ozone hole have been known for more than 20 yr, the detailed chemical processes determining how low the local concentration can fall, and how it recovers from the minimum have not been explored so far. Both of these aspects are investigated here by analysing results from the Chemical Lagrangian Model of the Stratosphere (CLaMS). As ozone falls below about 0.5 ppmv, a balance is maintained by gas phase production of both HCl and HOCl followed by heterogeneous reaction between these two compounds in these simulations. Thereafter, a very rapid, irreversible chlorine deactivation into HCl can occur, either when ozone drops to values low enough for gas phase HCl production to exceed chlorine activation processes or when temperatures increase above the polar stratospheric cloud (PSC) threshold. As a consequence, the timing and mixing ratio of the minimum ozone depends sensitively on model parameters, including the ozone initialisation. The subsequent ozone increase between October and December is linked mainly to photochemical ozone production, caused by oxygen photolysis and by the oxidation of carbon monoxide and methane.
url http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/11/12217/2011/acp-11-12217-2011.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT jugrooß stratosphericozonechemistryintheantarcticwhatdeterminesthelowestozonevaluesreachedandtheirrecovery
AT kbrautzsch stratosphericozonechemistryintheantarcticwhatdeterminesthelowestozonevaluesreachedandtheirrecovery
AT rpommrich stratosphericozonechemistryintheantarcticwhatdeterminesthelowestozonevaluesreachedandtheirrecovery
AT ssolomon stratosphericozonechemistryintheantarcticwhatdeterminesthelowestozonevaluesreachedandtheirrecovery
AT rmuller stratosphericozonechemistryintheantarcticwhatdeterminesthelowestozonevaluesreachedandtheirrecovery
_version_ 1725375266192097280