Title: Sinks
1Sinks and Photochemistry
2Sinks
- To maintain steady state concentrations in the
atmosphere, the rates of removal of atmospheric
species must balance the rates of their
production - Chemical reactions act not only as sources but
also as sinks. - But one could argue that chemical reactions are
not true sinks, just transformations! - At some point the element must be removed.
- H2, He light enough to achieve escape velocity
(11.2 km/sec) at high temperatures reached in
outer regions of the thermosphere (exosphere) - estimates based molecular velocities and
temperatures say - t(H2) 10 3 .5 yr
- t(He) 10 8 1 yr
- but t(H2) observed to be 10 years
- removed through chemical reactions and in soil by
micro-organisms.
3Sinks
- Some unreactive gases are too heavy to escape and
have no identified sinks - e.g. Argon is produced by radioactive decay of
40K (electron capture) - 40K e- ? 40Ar g (t1/2 1.25 x 109 yr)
- Argon has been accumulating since the Earth was
formed.
4Sinks
- Ultimate removal of trace components occurs via
two pathways - (i) Dry Deposition
- direct transfer of gases and particles to the
ground - (can also be onto wet surfaces oceans)
- (ii) Wet Removal
- trace constituents dissolved in rainfall.
- Soluble gases, e.g. SO2 , tend to dry deposit
relatively quickly. - water is of great importance for deposition.
- SO2 deposited more effectively on dew covered
crops.
5Sinks
- Flux of gas to the ground is expressed as
- F Vg c
- Flux deposition velocity
- concentration of gas
- Even for the deposition of very soluble gases
onto wet surfaces, - Vg lt 1 cm/sec
- (column of gas deposited onto the ground)
- Gas trapped in the first km of the amosphere is
absorbed by Earths surface in 105 sec ( 28
hr). - If Vg 1 cm/sec, deposition can represent
significant removal rates. - Surface morphology is an important aspect of
deposition. - Surface area
6Sinks
- Oceans are a particularly important sink.
- On solid surfaces, soils (soil microbes) can use
H2 and CO and act as a sink - weathering of inorganic minerals is also
important over long timescales (millions of
years) - oxygen removal via oxidation of sulfide and
ferrous iron - the reactions of the acid gases such as CO2 and
SO2 can give carbonate and sulphate minerals
7Examples of sinks
- Ocean
- Confirmation of long-range Saharan dust
transport. - Soil dust sampled over the tropical Atlantic two
decades ago appeared to come from the Saharan
Desert subsequent work provided additional
evidence that windborne dust from arid African
and Asian regions is indeed the principal source
of mineral aerosols found in global troposphere.
In a striking and definitive confirmation of this
hypothesis, ABLE-1 fights above Barbados observed
a massive infusion of Saharan dust at these
longitudes. Dense layers of the dust were mapped
for the first time by an airborne lidar system
and, at peak intensity, by aerial photography as
well. Such dust is eventually deposited onto the
sea surface, thousands of kilometers from the
source. Successive episodes can add mineral
nutrients to the ocean in amounts comparable to
those injected by the Amazon River.
8Examples of sinks
- Forests
- Examination of air chemistry over a tropical
forest. - The world's tropical forest are important sources
and sinks for many gas and aerosol species.
ABLE-1 flights over Guyana provided the first
comprehensive study of the wet tropical forest
boundary layer from an airborne platform. They
showed that this layer is a source of CO,
isoprene (C5H8), and dimethyl sulfide (DMS), as
well as a sink for O3. The Guyana forest was also
revealed to be a major source of chemically
important aerosols.
9Examples of sinks
- Marine life
- Assessment of marine DMS contributions to
atmospheric sulfur. - Marine phytoplankton are a major source of DMS.
Measurements of tropospheric DMS concentrations
confirmed earlier conclusions that marine DMS
production accounts for fully half of natural
sulfur dioxide (SO2) emissions, are important in
clean-air areas of the troposphere.
10Examples of sinks
- Arctic
- Arctic removal of oxides of nitrogen.
- Arctic tundra was found to remove important trace
nitrogen compounds from the atmosphere with high
efficiency through biological processes. This
reduces nitrogen oxide concentrations in the
lower and middle regions of the Arctic
troposphere to exceedingly low levels and so
prevents significant ozone formation.
11Examples of sinks
- Amazon Rain Forest
- Natural Sink for tropospheric ozone.
- The undisturbed rain forest is the most efficient
sink for O3 yet discovered. Amazonian O3
decomposition rates were found to be 5 to 50
times higher than those previously measured over
pine forest and water surfaces. The disappearance
of such a strong ozone sink through deforestation
would have global implications for atmospheric
chemistry.
12Aside Rain forest as a source
- Seasonal degradation of Amazonian air quality.
- Air above the Amazon jungle is extremely clean
during the wet season but deteriorates
dramatically during the dry season as the result
of biomass burning. This degradation is caused
mostly by burning at the edges of the forest.
Under the worst conditions, trace-gas
concentrations at aircraft altitudes approach
those typically observed over industrialized
regions. This is a spectacular example of
long-range transport of pollution into a pristine
environment.
13Aside Rain forest as a source
- Combustive production of greenhouse gases.
- Biomass burning is also a copious source of such
greenhouse gases as CO2, and CH4, as well as
other pollutants (e.g. CO and oxides of
nitrogen). Satellite observations during the dry
season have detected some 6,000 fires at the peak
of the burning, with associated haze covering
millions of square kilometers
http//www-gte.larc.nasa.gov/able/able_fig3.htm
Effect of Biomass Burning is shown by variation
of tropospheric carbon monoxide with height above
Amazon rainforest and with longitude along Amazon
River, as measured by ABLE-2A flights at the end
of wet season (July) and beginning of dry season
(August). Note enormous CO increase in August as
a result of biomass burning.
14Aside Rain forest as a source
- Methane emissions from Amazonian wetlands.
- The Amazon River floodplain is a globally
significant source of methane, supplying about
12 of the estimated worldwide total from all
wetlands sources. - Enhancement of tropospheric carbon monoxide.
- Over Amazonia, CO is enhanced by factors ranging
from 1.2 to 2.7 by comparison with adjacent ocean
regions. The major Amazonian sources of CO are
isoprene oxidation and biomass burning the
latter probably accounts for the most of the CO
enhancement observed by Space Shuttle instruments
prior to ABLE-2. - Importance of atmospheric circulation over the
rainforest. - ABLE-2 studies of spectacular atmospheric
circulations over Amazonia have shed new light on
links between the Amazon regions and global
circulation. Individual convective storms
transport 200 megatons of air per hour, of which
3 megatons is water vapor that releases 100.000
megawatts of energy into the atmosphere through
condensation into rain. Replacement of forest
with wetlands or pasture is likely to have a
large impact on this enormous furnace, with
attendant effects on atmospheric circulation
patterns, and hence climate.
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16Global Cycles and Residence Times
- Carbon Cycle
- CO2 exchange via photosynthesis and respiration
involves enormous quantities - otherwise, the pathways of (trace) reduced carbon
dominate the cycle and are determined by gas
phase reactivity - Formaldehyde (HCHO) is produced from methane and
is most reactive (short residence time of 1
day) - small amounts of long-lived gases such as CH4 and
CO are transferred to the stratosphere and then
oxidized in photochemically initiated reactions - source of H2O in dry levels of atmosphere.
- CH4 leads to the generation of HCHO and CO
- Oxidation of large hydrocarbons leads to CO as
well. - Natural sources of CO are larger than that due to
human activity.
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18Global Cycles and Residence Times
- Sulfur Cycle
- Dominant biological sources of reduced sulphur
((CH3)2S, H2S) are from soils (microbes) and
oceans (phytoplankton) - Volcanic emissions SO2 and H2S
- most reduced sulfur is oxidized to sulfate (but
some dry deposition) - Oceans are a giant source of oxidized sulfur
(sulfate within sea salt) - Recycled back to oceans.
- Transferred to land.
- Neutral in terms of acidity
- SO42- produced via oxidation of SO2 generates H
ions (acid rain)
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20Global Cycles and Residence Times
- Nitrogen Cycle
- Large amounts of N2, N2O produced by
denitrification - Some N2O crosses the tropopause and is oxidized
in the stratosphere (N2O is unreactive) - N2 is removed (fixed) into terrestrial and marine
biology and in lightning strikes (as NOx) - N2 is fixed by the use of fertilizers!
- Industrial production of fertilizers is via the
Haber process - N2 3H2 ? 2NH3
- NH3 can be injected into soils or added as a
nitrate salt - NH3 2O2 ? HNO3 H2O
- air oxidation of NH3
- HNO3 NH3 ? NH4NO3
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24Photochemistry!!!
- Photochemical and Radiation-Chemical Reactions
- Two kinds of radiation
- Electromagnetic Radiation Particle Radiation
- e.g. e.g.
- Infrared a particles (He nuclei)
- Visible ß particles (electrons)
- UV protons, neutrons etc.
- X-rays (particle accelerators)
- EM Radiation acts like a beam of particles
(photons) -
25Photochemistry!!!
- Photo- vs. Radiation-chemical distinction
sometimes made on the basis of - (i) whether or not ions are produced
- IR, vis, soft UV dont produce ions ?
photochemical processes out to mesosphere - Hard UV, X-Rays, particles produce ions ?
radiation-chemical processes in ionosphere - (ii) specificity
- low energy sources give reactions with simple
stoichiometries ? photochemical - high energy sources can be messy many
fragments, products, recombination processes
?radiation-chemical
26Photochemical Reactions
- For radiation to bring about chemical change it
must first be absorbed 1819 von Grotthuss - Einsteins Law of Photochemical Equivalence
(1912) one photon of radiation is absorbed by
one molecule - In all cases it is the light absorbed and not the
incident intensity that directly controls the
rate of a photochemical reaction.
27Photochemical Primary Process
- Radiation is absorbed by a molecule which leads
to the formation of species that undergo further
reaction - primary process - e.g. excited state ? atoms and free radicals
(primary process) - Photolysis photo light lysis splitting
- Atoms and radicals may go on to react
subsequently (secondary processes) - e.g. Acetone (280 nm light)
- CH3COCH3 h? ? CH3CO CH3 ? 2CH3 CO
- primary process
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30Photochemical Primary Process
- Light must be absorbed for chemical change, but
not all light absorbed leads to chemical change
.... - To understand the primary process one must
understand excited molecules - ? Concept of Potential Energy Curves
31For a diatomic molecule, the electronic states
can be represented by plots of potential energy
as a function of internuclear distance.
Electronic transitions are vertical or almost
vertical lines on such a plot since the
electronic transition occurs so rapidly that the
internuclear distance can't change much in the
process. Vibrational transitions occur between
different vibrational levels of the same
electronic state. Rotational transitions occur
mostly between rotational levels of the same
vibrational state, although there are many
examples of combination vibration-rotation
transitions for light molecules.
hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/molecule/molec
.html
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33Franck-Condon Principle
- Probabilities of transitions when light is
absorbed are governed by the Franck-Condon
Principle - Relative speeds of electronic transitions are
much faster then vibrational motions. - Absorption of radiation t 10-15 10-18 sec
- Vibrational motion t 10-13 sec
- Intermolecular separations of molecules are the
same before and after an electronic absorption
transition. This leads to - (i) vertical transitions
- (ii) transitions allowed only if h? equals the
energy difference between two levels - (iii) probability of a transiton is small if the
two states correspond to a very different
interatomic distance - (iv) vibrational wavefunctions
34Frank-Condon excitation is often described as the
absence of the change of the nuclear coordinates
upon excitation (because the nuclei are so much
more massive than the electrons, an electronic
transition takes place very much faster than the
nuclei can respond), but in the quantum chemical
description of the FranckCondon principle, the
molecule undergoes a transition to the upper
vibrational state that most closely resembles the
vibrational wavefunction of the vibrational
ground state of the lower electronic state.
In this figure, the system is excited with white
light and the corresponding spectrum is shown
vertically. The wavefunction drawn in black has
highest overlap with that of the ground state
level. In this case the Frank-Condon factors are
related to the Einstein coefficients (and the
extinction coefficients). The Franck-Condon
factor is simply the overlap matrix element
between vibrational nuclear states. Incase only
one wavelength is used, the wavefunction of the
lowest vibrational level of the ground state
shown here would be projected onto one
vibrational wavefunction of the higher electronic
state.
http//home.uva.nl/r.m.williams/Introduction20to
20ET-30.htm
35In the electron transfer process that occurs
after Frank-Condon excitation of a donor-acceptor
system, the direct overlap of the vibrational
wavefunctions of the initial and the final state
plays a role. The two curves represent the local
excited state and the charge transfer state.
Electron transfer that is described by nuclear
tunneling is related to this overlap.
http//home.uva.nl/r.m.williams/Introduction20to
20ET-30.htm
36This figure gives a representation of several
aspects that occur during electron transfer. On
the left, the electron probability density (also
referred to as electronic position) at the donor
site and at the acceptor site and the evolution
of the electron density during the process is
displayed. On the right, the two parabola
represent the initial reactant state and the
final product state.
As the process proceeds the position on the
potential energy surface changes, and thereby the
energy gap between the two states becomes
smaller, until the barrier is reached, to
increase again in the final state of the process
(adapted from Marcus and Sutin)
http//home.uva.nl/r.m.williams/Introduction20to
20ET-30.htm
Marcus, R.A. Sutin, N. Biochim. Biophys. Acta
1985, 811, 265.
37http//jegog.phys.nagoya-u.ac.jp/ayamada/rhod_pho
toiso_pot.html
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39Potential Energy Surfaces
- Diatomic P.E. curves are straightforward to
understand. For polyatomics things are more
complicated - ? Multidimensional P.E. Surface
- Pseudo-diatomic curves are sections or slices
through the PES - If a diatomic has sufficient energy to
dissociate, it does so within the period of the
first vibration ( 10-13 sec) - For polyatomics, dissociation can take longer
(10-8 sec) because energy is distributed among
many modes of vibration.
40http//www.chem.hope.edu/polik/poster/HFCO97.htm
41Potential energy surface describes energy of a
molecule in terms of its structure. Molecules
move on the potential energy surface.
- Structure
- determined from the potential energy surface
- minimum corresponds to an equilibrium structure
- first order saddle point corresponds to a
transition state for a reaction - a reaction path is the steepest descent path
connecting a transition state to minima
http//www.chem.wayne.edu/hbs/chm6440/PES.html
42http//www.che.hw.ac.uk/people/mjp.html
43Photochemical reactions to be continued