z-logo
Premium
Bromide and chloride distribution across the snow‐sea ice‐ocean interface: A comparative study between an Arctic coastal marine site and an experimental sea ice mesocosm
Author(s) -
Xu Wen,
Tenuta Mario,
Wang Feiyue
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: oceans
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-9291
pISSN - 2169-9275
DOI - 10.1002/2015jc011409
Subject(s) - sea ice , snow , arctic , snowpack , arctic ice pack , bromine , oceanography , arctic geoengineering , environmental science , atmospheric sciences , geology , climatology , chemistry , antarctic sea ice , geomorphology , organic chemistry
During springtime in the Arctic, bromine explosion events occur when high concentrations of reactive bromine species are observed in the boundary layer with the concurrence of ozone depletion events and mercury depletion events. While a variety of substrates including snow, sea ice, frost flowers, and aerosols have been proposed to be the substrate and/or source of bromine activation in the Arctic, recent studies have highlighted the role of snow. Here we report concentration profiles of halides (Br − and Cl − ), Na + , and mercury across the snow‐sea ice‐seawater interface at a coastal marine site in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago in March and June 2014, as well as in an experimental sea ice mesocosm in Winnipeg in January and February 2014. The occurrence of bromine activation at the Arctic site in March was indicated by the high mercury concentrations in snowpack. At both the Arctic and mesocosm sites, the molar ratios of Br − /Na + were nearly constant throughout the sea ice depth, but highly variable in the upper layer of the overlying snowpack, revealing that bromine activation takes place in the sunlit snow instead of sea ice. This is supported by calculations showing that the loss of Br – from the upper layer of the snowpack is large enough to produce the observed concentrations of reactive bromine in the atmospheric boundary layer. However, the upper layer of the Arctic snowpack tends to be generally enriched in Br – due to the net addition of Br – ‐containing gases and nonsea‐salt aerosols.

This content is not available in your region!

Continue researching here.

Having issues? You can contact us here