Global impact of the Antarctic ozone hole: Chemical propagation

A model is presented for the chemical mixing of stratospheric air over spatial scales from tens of kilometers to meters. Photochemistry, molecular diffusion, and strain (the stretching of air parcels due to wind shear) are combined into a single one-dimensional model. The model is applied to the cas...

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Published in:Journal of Geophysical Research
Main Authors: Prather, Michael, Jaffe, Andrew H
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: eScholarship, University of California 1990
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/2s2494c0
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author Prather, Michael
Jaffe, Andrew H
author_facet Prather, Michael
Jaffe, Andrew H
author_sort Prather, Michael
collection University of California: eScholarship
container_issue D4
container_start_page 3473
container_title Journal of Geophysical Research
container_volume 95
description A model is presented for the chemical mixing of stratospheric air over spatial scales from tens of kilometers to meters. Photochemistry, molecular diffusion, and strain (the stretching of air parcels due to wind shear) are combined into a single one-dimensional model. The model is applied to the case in which chemically perturbed air parcels from the Antarctic stratosphere are transported to mid-latitudes and strained into thin ribbon-like filaments until they are diffusively mixed with the ambient stratosphere. We find that the parcels may be treated as evolving in chemical isolation until the final mixing. When parcels reach a transverse thickness of 50–100 m in the lower stratosphere, they are rapidly dispersed by the combination of molecular diffusion and strain. The rapidity of the final mixing implies a lower limit to the vertical scales of inhomogeneities observed in the lower stratosphere. For this sensitivity study we consider four types of Antarctic air: a control case representing unprocessed polar air; heterogeneous processing by polar stratospheric clouds (PSCs) that has repartitioned the Cl x and NO y families; processing that also includes denitrification and dehydration; and all processing plus 90% ozone depletion. Large abundances of ClO, resulting initially from heterogeneous processing of stratospheric air on PSCs, are sustained by extensive denitrification. (One exception is the case of Antarctic air with major ozone depletion in which ClO is converted rapidly to HCl upon release of small amounts of NO x as a result of the extremely nonlinear Cl x -NO y chemical system.) ClO concentrations in the mid-latitude stratosphere should be enhanced by as much as a factor of 5 due to the mixing of air processed around the Antarctic vortex and will remain elevated for most of the following season. Chemical propagation of the Antarctic ozone hole occurs in two phases: rapid loss of ozone in the heterogeneously processed parcels as they evolve in isolation, and more slowly, a relative recovery of ozone over the following months. Another important effect is the transport of denitrified Antarctic air reducing NO x and hence the total catalytic destruction of ozone throughout the southern mid-latitudes. In Antarctic air that has already been depleted of ozone within the vortex, little additional loss occurs during transport, and the propagation of chemically perturbed air acts partially to offset the deficit at mid-latitudes caused by dynamical dilution of the ozone hole. In air which has not experienced substantial ozone loss, chemical propagation can generate a net ozone deficit of order 2–3% at mid-latitudes.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
geographic Antarctic
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
The Antarctic
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.1029/JD095iD04p03473
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op_rights Attribution (CC BY): http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
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op_source Prather, Michael; & Jaffe, Andrew H. (1990). Global impact of the Antarctic ozone hole: Chemical propagation. Journal of Geophysical Research, 95(D4), 3473. doi:10.1029/JD095iD04p03473. UC Irvine: Department of Earth System Science, UCI. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/2s2494c0
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spelling ftcdlib:qt2s2494c0 2025-01-16T19:24:06+00:00 Global impact of the Antarctic ozone hole: Chemical propagation Prather, Michael Jaffe, Andrew H 3473 1990-01-01 application/pdf http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/2s2494c0 english eng eScholarship, University of California qt2s2494c0 http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/2s2494c0 Attribution (CC BY): http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ CC-BY Prather, Michael; & Jaffe, Andrew H. (1990). Global impact of the Antarctic ozone hole: Chemical propagation. Journal of Geophysical Research, 95(D4), 3473. doi:10.1029/JD095iD04p03473. UC Irvine: Department of Earth System Science, UCI. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/2s2494c0 Physical Sciences and Mathematics chemical propagation chlorine chlorine monoxide nitrogen oxide ozone depletion ozone hole stratospheric chemistry model article 1990 ftcdlib https://doi.org/10.1029/JD095iD04p03473 2016-04-02T18:20:12Z A model is presented for the chemical mixing of stratospheric air over spatial scales from tens of kilometers to meters. Photochemistry, molecular diffusion, and strain (the stretching of air parcels due to wind shear) are combined into a single one-dimensional model. The model is applied to the case in which chemically perturbed air parcels from the Antarctic stratosphere are transported to mid-latitudes and strained into thin ribbon-like filaments until they are diffusively mixed with the ambient stratosphere. We find that the parcels may be treated as evolving in chemical isolation until the final mixing. When parcels reach a transverse thickness of 50–100 m in the lower stratosphere, they are rapidly dispersed by the combination of molecular diffusion and strain. The rapidity of the final mixing implies a lower limit to the vertical scales of inhomogeneities observed in the lower stratosphere. For this sensitivity study we consider four types of Antarctic air: a control case representing unprocessed polar air; heterogeneous processing by polar stratospheric clouds (PSCs) that has repartitioned the Cl x and NO y families; processing that also includes denitrification and dehydration; and all processing plus 90% ozone depletion. Large abundances of ClO, resulting initially from heterogeneous processing of stratospheric air on PSCs, are sustained by extensive denitrification. (One exception is the case of Antarctic air with major ozone depletion in which ClO is converted rapidly to HCl upon release of small amounts of NO x as a result of the extremely nonlinear Cl x -NO y chemical system.) ClO concentrations in the mid-latitude stratosphere should be enhanced by as much as a factor of 5 due to the mixing of air processed around the Antarctic vortex and will remain elevated for most of the following season. Chemical propagation of the Antarctic ozone hole occurs in two phases: rapid loss of ozone in the heterogeneously processed parcels as they evolve in isolation, and more slowly, a relative recovery of ozone over the following months. Another important effect is the transport of denitrified Antarctic air reducing NO x and hence the total catalytic destruction of ozone throughout the southern mid-latitudes. In Antarctic air that has already been depleted of ozone within the vortex, little additional loss occurs during transport, and the propagation of chemically perturbed air acts partially to offset the deficit at mid-latitudes caused by dynamical dilution of the ozone hole. In air which has not experienced substantial ozone loss, chemical propagation can generate a net ozone deficit of order 2–3% at mid-latitudes. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic University of California: eScholarship Antarctic The Antarctic Journal of Geophysical Research 95 D4 3473
spellingShingle Physical Sciences and Mathematics
chemical propagation
chlorine
chlorine monoxide
nitrogen oxide
ozone depletion
ozone hole
stratospheric chemistry model
Prather, Michael
Jaffe, Andrew H
Global impact of the Antarctic ozone hole: Chemical propagation
title Global impact of the Antarctic ozone hole: Chemical propagation
title_full Global impact of the Antarctic ozone hole: Chemical propagation
title_fullStr Global impact of the Antarctic ozone hole: Chemical propagation
title_full_unstemmed Global impact of the Antarctic ozone hole: Chemical propagation
title_short Global impact of the Antarctic ozone hole: Chemical propagation
title_sort global impact of the antarctic ozone hole: chemical propagation
topic Physical Sciences and Mathematics
chemical propagation
chlorine
chlorine monoxide
nitrogen oxide
ozone depletion
ozone hole
stratospheric chemistry model
topic_facet Physical Sciences and Mathematics
chemical propagation
chlorine
chlorine monoxide
nitrogen oxide
ozone depletion
ozone hole
stratospheric chemistry model
url http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/2s2494c0