Assessing known pathways for HO2 loss in aqueous atmospheric aerosols: Regional and global impacts on tropospheric oxidants

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Abstract

We present a study of the potential importance of known reaction pathways for HO2 loss in atmospheric aerosols. As a baseline case, we calculate the reaction probability for HO2 loss by its self-reaction in aqueous particles. Detailed calculations assessed the effects of aerosol pH, temperature, particle size, and aqueous phase diffusion limitations on the rate of HO2 loss by this process. An algebraic parameterization of the reaction probability, γHO2, due to self-reaction is valid for aerosol pH < 6 and the existence of a homogeneous gas-phase HOx source greater than 1 × 105 molec cm-3 s-1. In this formulation γHO2 depends strongly on particle phase, size, pH and temperature; the latter causing γHO2 > 0.1 in the upper troposphere and γ HO2 < 0.01 in the extra-polar lower troposphere. We contrast the self-reaction pathway with catalytic oxidation by dissolved Cu ions. Using IMPROVE network data we assess the atmospheric importance and uncertainties associated with the Cu pathway. Simulations of tropospheric chemistry were performed using the GEOS-Chem global chemical transport model with different parameterizations of γ HO2. Relative to simulations where γ HO2 = 0 for all aerosol types, assuming that only the aqueous-phase self-reaction proceeds on pollution and sea salt particles causes global annual mean differences in surface OH, HO2, and H2O2 of -1, -2, and +2%, respectively. These minor effects of heterogeneous loss are significantly different from a simulation assuming γHO2 = 0.2 on all particles, as is currently recommended, with implications for predictions of regional HOx levels, ozone production rates and their sensitivity to NOx. Copyright 2008 by the American Geophysical Union.

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Thornton, J. A., Jaeglé, L., & McNeill, V. F. (2008). Assessing known pathways for HO2 loss in aqueous atmospheric aerosols: Regional and global impacts on tropospheric oxidants. Journal of Geophysical Research Atmospheres, 113(5). https://doi.org/10.1029/2007JD009236

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