Measurements of Photolyzable Chlorine and Bromine During the Polar Sunrise Experiment

We report measurements of rapidly photolyzable chlorine (Clp; e.g., Cl2 And HOCl) and bromine (Brp; e.g., Br2 and HOBr) in the high Arctic using a newly developed photoactive halogen detector (PHD). Ground level ambient air was sampled daily from mid‐February through mid‐April in the Canadian Arctic...

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Main Authors: Impey, G.A., Shepson, P.B., Hastie, D.R., Barrie, L.A., Analauf, K.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: AGU 1997
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10315/4125
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spelling ftyorkuniv:oai:yorkspace.library.yorku.ca:10315/4125 2023-10-01T03:53:51+02:00 Measurements of Photolyzable Chlorine and Bromine During the Polar Sunrise Experiment Impey, G.A. Shepson, P.B. Hastie, D.R. Barrie, L.A. Analauf, K. 1997 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10315/4125 en eng AGU J. Geophys. Res., 102, 16,005-16,010 http://hdl.handle.net/10315/4125 http://www.agu.org/journals/jd/ Article 1997 ftyorkuniv 2023-09-02T23:02:31Z We report measurements of rapidly photolyzable chlorine (Clp; e.g., Cl2 And HOCl) and bromine (Brp; e.g., Br2 and HOBr) in the high Arctic using a newly developed photoactive halogen detector (PHD). Ground level ambient air was sampled daily from mid‐February through mid‐April in the Canadian Arctic at Alert, Northwest Territories (82.5°N, 62.3°W), as part of the Polar Sunrise Experiment (PSE) 1995. Concentrations of “total photolyzable chlorine” varied from <9 to 100 pptv as Cl2 and that of “total photolyzable bromine” from <4 to 38 pptv as Br2. High concentration episodes of chlorine were observed only prior to sunrise (March 21), while high concentration episodes of bromine were measured throughout the study. The high concentrations of photolyzable chlorine and bromine prior to sunrise suggest a “dark” production mechanism that we assume yields Cl2 and Br2. An inverse correlation of bromine with ozone is clearly present in one major ozone depletion episode at the end of March. A trajectory analysis, taken with the differences in measured levels of photolyzable chlorine and bromine after sunrise, imply different production mechanisms for these two types of species. A steady state analysis of the data for one ozone depletion episode suggests a [Br]/[Cl] ratio in the range 100–300. The high concentrations of photolyzable bromine after sunrise imply the existence of a precursor other than aerosol bromide. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Northwest Territories York University, Toronto: YorkSpace Arctic Northwest Territories
institution Open Polar
collection York University, Toronto: YorkSpace
op_collection_id ftyorkuniv
language English
description We report measurements of rapidly photolyzable chlorine (Clp; e.g., Cl2 And HOCl) and bromine (Brp; e.g., Br2 and HOBr) in the high Arctic using a newly developed photoactive halogen detector (PHD). Ground level ambient air was sampled daily from mid‐February through mid‐April in the Canadian Arctic at Alert, Northwest Territories (82.5°N, 62.3°W), as part of the Polar Sunrise Experiment (PSE) 1995. Concentrations of “total photolyzable chlorine” varied from <9 to 100 pptv as Cl2 and that of “total photolyzable bromine” from <4 to 38 pptv as Br2. High concentration episodes of chlorine were observed only prior to sunrise (March 21), while high concentration episodes of bromine were measured throughout the study. The high concentrations of photolyzable chlorine and bromine prior to sunrise suggest a “dark” production mechanism that we assume yields Cl2 and Br2. An inverse correlation of bromine with ozone is clearly present in one major ozone depletion episode at the end of March. A trajectory analysis, taken with the differences in measured levels of photolyzable chlorine and bromine after sunrise, imply different production mechanisms for these two types of species. A steady state analysis of the data for one ozone depletion episode suggests a [Br]/[Cl] ratio in the range 100–300. The high concentrations of photolyzable bromine after sunrise imply the existence of a precursor other than aerosol bromide.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Impey, G.A.
Shepson, P.B.
Hastie, D.R.
Barrie, L.A.
Analauf, K.
spellingShingle Impey, G.A.
Shepson, P.B.
Hastie, D.R.
Barrie, L.A.
Analauf, K.
Measurements of Photolyzable Chlorine and Bromine During the Polar Sunrise Experiment
author_facet Impey, G.A.
Shepson, P.B.
Hastie, D.R.
Barrie, L.A.
Analauf, K.
author_sort Impey, G.A.
title Measurements of Photolyzable Chlorine and Bromine During the Polar Sunrise Experiment
title_short Measurements of Photolyzable Chlorine and Bromine During the Polar Sunrise Experiment
title_full Measurements of Photolyzable Chlorine and Bromine During the Polar Sunrise Experiment
title_fullStr Measurements of Photolyzable Chlorine and Bromine During the Polar Sunrise Experiment
title_full_unstemmed Measurements of Photolyzable Chlorine and Bromine During the Polar Sunrise Experiment
title_sort measurements of photolyzable chlorine and bromine during the polar sunrise experiment
publisher AGU
publishDate 1997
url http://hdl.handle.net/10315/4125
geographic Arctic
Northwest Territories
geographic_facet Arctic
Northwest Territories
genre Arctic
Northwest Territories
genre_facet Arctic
Northwest Territories
op_relation J. Geophys. Res., 102, 16,005-16,010
http://hdl.handle.net/10315/4125
op_rights http://www.agu.org/journals/jd/
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