National Centre for Atmospheric Science, University of York, York, YO10 5DD, U.K.
Environ Sci Technol. 2012 Oct 16;46(20):11028-39. doi: 10.1021/es302082p. Epub 2012 Oct 3.
Oxygenated volatile organic compounds (OVOCs) in the atmosphere are precursors to peroxy acetyl nitrate (PAN), affect the tropospheric ozone budget, and in the remote marine environment represent a significant sink of the hydroxyl radical (OH). The sparse observational database for these compounds, particularly in the tropics, contributes to a high uncertainty in their emissions and atmospheric significance. Here, we show measurements of acetone, methanol, and acetaldehyde in the tropical remote marine boundary layer made between October 2006 and September 2011 at the Cape Verde Atmospheric Observatory (CVAO) (16.85° N, 24.87° W). Mean mixing ratios of acetone, methanol, and acetaldehyde were 546 ± 295 pptv, 742 ± 419 pptv, and 428 ± 190 pptv, respectively, averaged from approximately hourly values over this five-year period. The CAM-Chem global chemical transport model reproduced annual average acetone concentrations well (21% overestimation) but underestimated levels by a factor of 2 in autumn and overestimated concentrations in winter. Annual average concentrations of acetaldehyde were underestimated by a factor of 10, rising to a factor of 40 in summer, and methanol was underestimated on average by a factor of 2, peaking to over a factor of 4 in spring. The model predicted summer minima in acetaldehyde and acetone, which were not apparent in the observations. CAM-Chem was adapted to include a two-way sea-air flux parametrization based on seawater measurements made in the Atlantic Ocean, and the resultant fluxes suggest that the tropical Atlantic region is a net sink for acetone but a net source for methanol and acetaldehyde. Inclusion of the ocean fluxes resulted in good model simulations of monthly averaged methanol levels although still with a 3-fold underestimation in acetaldehyde. Wintertime acetone levels were better simulated, but the observed autumn levels were more severely underestimated than in the standard model. We suggest that the latter may be caused by underestimated terrestrial biogenic African primary and/or secondary OVOC sources by the model. The model underestimation of acetaldehyde concentrations all year round implies a consistent significant missing source, potentially from secondary chemistry of higher alkanes produced biogenically from plants or from the ocean. We estimate that low model bias in OVOC abundances in the remote tropical marine atmosphere may result in up to 8% underestimation of the global methane lifetime due to missing model OH reactivity. Underestimation of acetaldehyde concentrations is responsible for the bulk (∼70%) of this missing reactivity.
大气中含氧挥发性有机化合物(OVOCs)是过氧乙酰硝酸酯(PAN)的前体,影响对流层臭氧预算,在偏远的海洋环境中,它是羟基自由基(OH)的一个重要汇。这些化合物的观测数据库非常稀疏,尤其是在热带地区,这导致它们的排放量和大气重要性存在很高的不确定性。在这里,我们展示了 2006 年 10 月至 2011 年 9 月在佛得角大气观测站(CVAO)(16.85°N,24.87°W)测量的热带偏远海洋边界层中的丙酮、甲醇和乙醛。五年期间,平均每小时值的平均值分别为 546±295 pptv、742±419 pptv 和 428±190 pptv。CAM-Chem 全球化学传输模型很好地再现了丙酮的年平均浓度(21%的高估),但在秋季低估了 2 倍,在冬季高估了浓度。乙醛的年平均浓度被低估了 10 倍,在夏季上升到 40 倍,甲醇平均被低估了 2 倍,在春季上升到 4 倍以上。模型预测夏季乙醛和丙酮的最低值,但在观测中并不明显。CAM-Chem 经过修改,纳入了基于大西洋海水测量的双向海-气通量参数化,结果表明,热带大西洋地区是丙酮的净汇,但甲醇和乙醛的净源。纳入海洋通量后,甲醇的月平均水平得到了很好的模拟,尽管仍低估了 3 倍的乙醛。冬季丙酮水平的模拟效果更好,但观测到的秋季水平比标准模型低估得更严重。我们认为,后者可能是由于模型低估了陆地生物源非洲原始和/或次生 OVOC 源。全年模型对乙醛浓度的低估意味着存在一个持续的重要缺失源,该源可能来自植物或海洋生物产生的较高烷烃的次生化学,也可能来自海洋。我们估计,由于模型 OH 反应性缺失,偏远热带海洋大气中 OVOC 丰度的低模型偏差可能导致甲烷全球寿命缩短 8%。乙醛浓度的低估是导致这一缺失反应性的主要原因(约 70%)。