Title: Chem. 253
1Chem. 253 2/5 Lecture
2Announcements I
- I have updated the homework set on the web site
- Now has solutions for non-collected subset 1.1
problems - Also has subset 1.2 (for next week)
- Last Weeks Group Assignment
- Trial, not graded
- This Weeks Group Assignment
- on stratospheric chemistry (O only, mostly
covered last time)
3Announcements II
- Todays Lecture Topics
- More on O only chemistry (putting reactions in
context and covering spatial variations) - Catalytic destruction of ozone Mechanism I
- Catalytic destruction of ozone - reservoir
species and Mechanism II - The ozone hole
4Stratospheric ChemistryO only Chemistry
- Factors Affecting Ozone Formation
- Full set of Chapman Mechanism reactions
- O2 hn ? 2O
- O O2 M ? O3 M
- O3 hn ? O2 O
- O O3 ? 2O2
- Short l UV needed to photolyze O2
- see next slide
- Pressure O3 formation is slower at higher
altitudes (lower O2 and M) - Short UV also shortens O3 lifetime at higher
altitudes
rxn 4 kinetic equation -dO3/dt kOO3
5Stratospheric ChemistryO only Chemistry
- Factors Affecting Ozone Formation
- Short l UV needed to photolyze O2
- more prevalent at higher altitudes (less removal
from absorption above) - and at lower latitudes (due to transmission
through more atmosphere at higher latitudes)
Earth
longer pathlength
surface at high latitudes
surface in tropics
6Stratospheric ChemistryO only Chemistry
Wayne, Chemistry of Atmospheres, 2nd Ed., p. 124
7Stratospheric ChemistryO only Chemistry
N
- However, despite production occurring mostly at
high altitudes/ low latitudes, concentrations are
higher at high latitudes/low altitudes - This is due to transport
O3 Concentration Plot Wayne - Chemistry of
Atmospheres, 2nd Ed., p. 119
8Stratospheric ChemistryOzone Loss
- Ozone Destruction O only chemistry
- Reaction 4 (O O3 ? 2O2) is only real loss
(ozone photolysis recycles odd O) - Ozone Destruction observations
- models predict higher than observed
concentrations - Catalytic Mechanisms for loss
- a catalytic mechanism should result in the same
net reaction as Chapman Rxn 4, but can involve
another species
9Stratospheric ChemistryOzone Loss Mechanism I
- Mechanism I
- rxn 1 X O3 ? O2 XO
- rxn 2 XO O ? O2 X
- net rxn O O3 ? 2O2 same as Chapman 4
- X Catalytic Species
- X Cl, NO, OH
- sources from troposphere (will go into in more
detail)
10Stratospheric ChemistryOzone Loss Mechanism I
- X NO
- NO source mainly N2O (both natural and
anthropogenic) - N2O (stable in troposphere, so can survive slow
transport to stratosphere) - reaction in stratosphere
- N2O O ? NO O2
- Catalytic Cycle
- rxn 1 NO O3 ? O2 NO2
- rxn 2 NO2 O ? O2 NO
- Complications
- NO2 hn ? NO O (null cycle reaction when
teamed with rxn 1)
11Stratospheric ChemistryOzone Loss Mechanism I
- X Cl, Br
- Cl sources
- natural sources CH3Cl (a fraction is transported
to stratosphere) - anthropogenic sources CFCs
- very stable in troposphere (zero losses there)
- C-Cl bonds photolyzed in stratosphere
- Br sources halons (for extinguishing fires)
CH3Br (fumigant) - Both halogen reactions are very fast
12Stratospheric ChemistryOzone Loss Mechanism I
- X OH
- H sources
- tropospheric H2O (actually very little transport
tropopause is a cold trap) - CH4 O ? OH CH3 (CH3 produces more H radicals
OH and HO2)
13Stratospheric ChemistryOzone Loss Mechanism I
- Mechanism I resulted in over prediction of O3
loss, particularly from Cl cycle - Reason missed reservoir species
- In 1970s, predictions changed frequently
O3 Loss Rate Plot Wayne - Chemistry of
Atmospheres, 2nd Ed., p. 158
14Break for Group Activity
15Stratospheric ChemistryOzone Loss Reservoir
Species
- Example of reservoir species
- ClO NO ? ClONO2
- this removes both Cl and NO from catalytic loss
cycles - like many reservoir species, ClONO2 can be
reactivated - ClONO2 hn ? ClO NO
- Other reservoir species HCl, HBr, HNO3
- Inclusion of reservoir species tends to reduce
predicted O3 loss rates (much of mechanism I X
species in inactive forms) - However, reactivation results in quick loss of
ozone
16Stratospheric ChemistryOzone Loss Mechanism II
- Mechanism I reactions expects greater loss at
high altitudes, while observations showed loss at
lower altitudes - Mechanism II losses
- X O3 ? XO O2
- X O3 ? XO O2 (note X or X must be Cl)
- XO XO ? XOOX ? (or ? ?) X X O2
- Net Reaction 2O3 ? 3O2
- Mechanism II does not involve O in reaction
- This is favored at lower altitudes/ lower
temperatures
17Stratospheric ChemistryOzone Holes
- In the early 1980s, the main O3 loss expected was
through gas phase mechanism I not focused on
low altitude/high latitudes - Ozone loss was observed through ground based and
satellite measurements - Ground Based measurement is Dobson Unit
(equivalent thickness if a column is reduced to
pure O3 at ground P, std T) - Ground based measurements showed large loss in
Antarctic Spring, but not observed in initial
satellite measurements (very low concentrations
were removed as not believeable)
18Stratospheric ChemistryOzone Holes
- Dobson unit O3 measures a column content, so it
gives an indication for UV blockage - More UV is blocked when Dobson Units are high
but also depends on latitude - Loss of ozone in Antarctic was not expected
- initial investigation was over cause (dynamic vs.
chemical) - special conditions occurs over Antarctica
- polar vortex isolating stratospheric air from low
latitude air - polar stratospheric clouds (PSCs) provide a
surface for heterogeneous reactions
19Stratospheric ChemistryOzone Holes
- Since ozone loss occurred in spring, reactivation
of reservoir species was thought to play a role - PSC particles were found to help with
reactivation reactions - ClONO2 (g) H2O(aq) ? HOCl(aq) HNO3(aq)
- and HCl(g) ? H Cl-
- and Cl- HOCl(aq) ? Cl2 (g) OH
20Stratospheric ChemistryOzone Holes
- Upon the end of winter, sunlight converts
unstable Cl species, HOCl and Cl2 into reactive
Cl - Measured ClO concentrations were found to be very
high - Also, NOx remains locked in PSC particles
- Ozone holes are transient and end when the vortex
ends, warming air and releasing HNO3 from PSC
particles allowing ClONO2 to reform
21Stratospheric ChemistryCauses and Effects
- While there are natural sources of catalytic
species, for each type (of X), anthropogenic
sources are significant - Sources NOx species
- Anthropogenic N2O sources
- fertilizer use
- nylon production
- Air Transport (combustion produces NOx and planes
can flow near or in the stratosphere) - However, NOx also forms ClONO2 (not all bad)
22Stratospheric ChemistryCauses and Effects
- Sources HOx species
- Anthropogenic CH4 sources (rice farming,
livestock, natural gas production) - Besides affecting HOx catalytic reactions, H2O
concentration and PSC occurrence is affected
23Stratospheric ChemistryCauses and Effects
- Sources Halogen species
- The greatest source of Cl is from CFCs
- Effects from this are dropping due to Montreal
Protocol - Br containing species are much greater at causing
ozone loss because HBr and BrONO2 are poor
reservoir species - Br comes from halons (similar to CFCs but Br
containing and used for fire extinguishers) and
CH3Br (fumigant)
24Stratospheric ChemistryCauses and Effects
- Effects main worry is UV
- Higher UV flux leads to worse sunburns, greater
incidence of skin cancer, and cataracts - Ozone hole occurrence is in a low human density
region (plus bad weather can limit worse
problems), but high UV can affect other life
forms and be transported to midlatitudes