Kinetics of the BrO + ClO reaction and implications for stratospheric ozone

The gas-phase reaction between BrO and CIO has been proposed as a potentially fast and synergistic mechanism of stratospheric ozone destruction. Further, it has been advanced1as a contributing factor to Antarctic springtime ozone column losses of ∼40% from 1960 to 19852,3Both dynamical4and chemical...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hills, AJ, Cicerone, RJ, Calvert, JG, Birks, JW
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: eScholarship, University of California 1988
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Online Access:http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/6h01h1ps
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Summary:The gas-phase reaction between BrO and CIO has been proposed as a potentially fast and synergistic mechanism of stratospheric ozone destruction. Further, it has been advanced1as a contributing factor to Antarctic springtime ozone column losses of ∼40% from 1960 to 19852,3Both dynamical4and chemical theories1,5-8have been advanced to explain the formation of the Antarctic 'ozone hole'. A major uncertainty in these theories has been the rate constant and product distribution of the BrO + ClO reaction as a function of temperature. Here we report the first direct measurements of these parameters. We show that this reaction could, indeed, account for a large fraction of the springtime ozone depletion over Antarctica and provide a source of chlorine dioxide of sufficient magnitude to explain the recent measurements of this species in the Antarctic stratosphere, provided that the stratosphere contains a sufficient quantity of bromine (∼20 p.p.t.v.). © 1987 Nature Publishing Group.