Catastrophic loss of stratospheric ozone in dense volcanic clouds

Rapid, localized loss of ozone is predicted to occur in the mid-latitude and tropical stratosphere in the presence of very large concentrations of sulfate aerosols. Volcanic eruptions can increase the effective surface area of sulfuric acid so that heterogeneous reactions involving ClONO2, and secon...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
Main Author: Prather, Michael
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: eScholarship, University of California 1992
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/741037pk
Description
Summary:Rapid, localized loss of ozone is predicted to occur in the mid-latitude and tropical stratosphere in the presence of very large concentrations of sulfate aerosols. Volcanic eruptions can increase the effective surface area of sulfuric acid so that heterogeneous reactions involving ClONO2, and secondarily N2O5, are able to suppress NO x abundances by more than a factor of 10 relative to gas phase chemistry. When NO x levels fall below a threshold, e.g., 0.6 ppb at 24 km in mid-latitudes, the chlorine-catalyzed loss of O3proceeds at rates comparable to those during the formation of the Antarctic ozone hole, more than 50 ppb per day. If such losses occurred following the eruption of Mount Pinatubo in the most volcanically perturbed regions over the tropics and mid-latitudes, this model predicts that they are driven primarily by the suppression Of NO x below these critical levels. The increase in stratospheric chlorine since El Chichon has made Mount Pinatubo more than twice as effective in causing rapid O3 loss. Overall global losses associated with a volcanic eruption are approximately linear in the amount of sulfate surface area, but depend critically on the rate of the CIONO2-sulfate reaction.