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Trace gas and aerosol interactions in the fully coupled model of aerosol-chemistry-climate ECHAM5-HAMMOZ: 2. Impact of heterogeneous chemistry on the global aerosol distributions
Ist Teil von
Journal of Geophysical Research - Atmospheres, 2008-04, Vol.113 (D7), p.D07309-n/a
Ort / Verlag
Washington, DC: American Geophysical Union
Erscheinungsjahr
2008
Quelle
Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
Beschreibungen/Notizen
We use the ECHAM5‐HAMMOZ aerosol‐chemistry‐climate model to quantify the influence of trace gas–aerosol interactions on the regional and global distributions and optical properties of aerosols for present‐day conditions. The model includes fully interactive simulations of gas phase and aerosol chemistry including a comprehensive set of heterogeneous reactions. We find that as a whole, the heterogeneous reactions have only a small effect on the SO2 and sulfate burden because of competing effects. The uptake of SO2 on dust and sea salt decreases the SO2 concentrations while the decrease in OH (that results from the uptake of HO2, N2O5, and O3) tends to increase SO2 (because of reduced oxidation). The sulfate formed in sea salt aerosols from SO2 uptake accounts for 3.7 Tg(S) a−1 (5%) of the total sulfate production. Uptake and subsequent reaction of SO2 on mineral dust contributes to a small formation of sulfate (0.55 Tg(S) a−1, <1%), but is responsible for the coating of mineral dust particles, resulting in an extra 300 Tg a−1 of dust being transferred from the insoluble to the soluble mixed modes. The burden of dust in the insoluble modes is reduced by 44%, while the total burden is reduced by 5% as a result of enhanced wet deposition efficiency. Changes in the sulfur cycle affect the H2SO4 concentrations and the condensation of H2SO4 on black carbon. Accounting for heterogeneous reactions enhances the global mean burden of hydrophobic black carbon particles by 4%. The changes in aerosol mixing state result only in a small change in the global and annual aerosol optical depth (AOD) and absorption optical depth (ABS), but have significant implications on regional and seasonal scale. For example, in the main polluted regions of the Northern Hemisphere, AOD and ABS increase by 10–30% and up to 15%, respectively, in winter.