z-logo
Premium
The atmospheric HCHO budget at Dumont d'Urville (East Antarctica): Contribution of photochemical gas‐phase production versus snow emissions
Author(s) -
Preunkert Susanne,
Legrand Michel,
Pépy Guillaume,
Gallée Hubert,
Jones Anna,
Jourdain Bruno
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-8996
pISSN - 2169-897X
DOI - 10.1002/2013jd019864
Subject(s) - snow , dimethyl sulfide , environmental science , carbonyl sulfide , west coast , methane , atmospheric sciences , gas phase , sink (geography) , environmental chemistry , chemistry , meteorology , oceanography , geology , sulfur , geography , organic chemistry , cartography
HCHO was monitored throughout the year 2009 at the coastal East Antarctic site of Dumont d'Urville (DDU) using Aerolaser AL‐4021 analyzers. The accurate determination of less than 100 pptv required optimization of the analyzers, in particular, to minimize effects of changing ambient temperatures. The impact of station activities and of the presence of large penguin colonies at the site in summer was scrutinized. The obtained contamination‐free record indicates monthly means close to 50 pptv from May to September and a maximum of 200 pptv in January. Zero‐dimensional and 2‐D calculations suggest that in summer, the largest HCHO source is the gas‐phase photochemistry (80%) mainly driven by methane oxidation, which is considerably greater than from snow emissions (20%). The influence of light alkenes, dimethyl sulfide, and halogens remains weak. In winter, snow emissions represent the main HCHO source (70%). These findings are compared to previous studies conducted at the West Antarctic coast. It is shown that in summer the HCHO production from methane chemistry is 3 times more efficient at DDU than at the west coast due to more frequent arrival of oxidant‐rich air masses from inland Antarctica. Halogen chemistry is found to represent a weak HCHO sink at both West and East Antarctica. Compared to DDU, the shallower atmospheric boundary layer and the less efficient gas‐phase production at the west coast make the snow pack the dominant HCHO source (85%) compared to gas‐phase photochemistry (15%) there in summer.

This content is not available in your region!

Continue researching here.

Having issues? You can contact us here