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Rates of Wintertime Atmospheric SO 2 Oxidation based on Aircraft Observations during Clear‐Sky Conditions over the Eastern United States
Author(s) -
Green Jaime R.,
Fiddler Marc N.,
Holloway John S.,
Fibiger Dorothy L.,
McDuffie Erin E.,
CampuzanoJost Pedro,
Schroder Jason C.,
Jimenez Jose L.,
Weinheimer Andrew J.,
Aquino Janine,
Montzka D. D.,
Hall Samuel R.,
Ullmann Kirk,
Shah Viral,
Jaeglé Lyatt,
Thornton Joel A.,
Bililign Solomon,
Brown Steven S.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-8996
pISSN - 2169-897X
DOI - 10.1029/2018jd030086
Subject(s) - environmental science , atmospheric sciences , sulfur dioxide , sulfate , plume , ozone , air pollution , meteorology , atmosphere (unit) , environmental chemistry , climatology , chemistry , geography , physics , inorganic chemistry , organic chemistry , geology
Sulfur dioxide (SO 2 ) is emitted in large quantities from coal‐burning power plants and leads to various harmful health and environmental effects. In this study, we use plume intercepts from the Wintertime INvestigation of Transport, Emission and Reactivity (WINTER) campaign to estimate the oxidation rates of SO 2 under wintertime conditions and the factors that determine SO 2 removal. Observations suggest that OH governs the rate SO 2 oxidation in the eastern United States during winter. The range of mean oxidation rates during the day from power plants were 0.22–0.71%/hr, producing SO 2 lifetimes of 13–43 days, if SO 2 consumption is assumed to occur during 10.5 hr of daylight in cloudless conditions. Though most nighttime rate measurements were zero within uncertainty, there is some evidence of nighttime removal, which suggests alternate oxidation mechanisms. The fastest nighttime observed SO 2 oxidation rate was 0.25±0.07%/hr, producing a combined day/night SO 2 lifetime of 8.5–21 days. The upper limit of the oxidation rate (the mean+1 σ of the fastest day and night observations) is 16.5%/day, corresponding to a lifetime of 6.1 days. The analysis also quantifies the primary emission of sulfate from power plants. The median mole percentage of SO 4 ‐2 from observed plumes was 1.7% and the mean percentage sulfate was 2.8% for intercepts within 1 hr of transit to power plants. The largest value observed from close intercepts was over 7% sulfate, and the largest extrapolated value was 18%, based on intercepts further from their source and fastest observed oxidation rate.

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