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Development and Field-Deployment of an Absorption Spectrometer to Measure Atmospheric HONO and NO2

Field observations show daytime HONO levels in urban, rural and remote environments are greater than those expected at photostationary state, that is, balance between production by \(NO+OH\) reaction and loss by UV-photolysis and OH-oxidation. Studies have interpreted measurements of \([HONO]_{Obs} > [HONO]_{PSS}\) - or equivalently, the rate of HONO loss exceeding that of production - as evidence of a missing, sunlight-driven HONO source. Formation rate inferred from assuming photostationarity indicate a significant source of HONO, which photolyzes to yield OH. Moreover, depending on the mechanism, it may represent a pathway by which deposited nitrogen oxides are repartitioned back into the atmosphere in reactive form. The accumulation of HONO beneath the nocturnal boundary layer initiates photochemistry in the early morning prior to other \(HO_x\) precursors. Previous studies have estimated nighttime HONO production rate by attributing the increase in \(HONO:NO_x\) solely to heterogeneous HONO formation, while treating \(NO_x\) as an invariant. Moreover, because ambient \(HONO:NO_x\) exceed what is observed in automobile exhaust, combustion sources are discounted.
In May of 2009, we observed HONO and \(NO_2\) mixing ratios in Houston, Texas during the SHARP campaign. We demonstrate – using a chemical box model – that photostationary state during daytime is not fully established. The reaction/transport time since emission from automobiles is short relative to the lifetime of HONO. The result of assuming PSS is a drastic over-estimation of the magnitude of the so-called missing HONO source. At night, we show that \(NO_x\) oxidation and emission are significant, thus, \(NO_x\) cannot be treated as a conservative tracer to infer secondary HONO production.
Nearly-continuous observations of HONO and \(NO_2\) at Harvard Forest from December 2010 to December 2011 reveal daytime HONO levels that are comparable to what is expected from just known chemistry and much lower than has been reported in similar environments by different measurement techniques. Moreover, HONO fluxes are always below detection limit, indicating daytime HONO production contributes negligibly to the \(HO_x\) and \(NO_x\) budgets of the overlying atmosphere at Harvard Forest. Nighttime HONO enhancement is observed, but high night-to-night variability in \(HONO:NO_2\) that is not reasonably explained by the trends in HONO and \(NO_2\) fluxes, suggest a non-\(NO_2\), non-ground/canopy-surface related HONO source. / Engineering and Applied Sciences

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:harvard.edu/oai:dash.harvard.edu:1/9280214
Date20 July 2012
CreatorsLee, Hwan
ContributorsWofsy, Steven C.
PublisherHarvard University
Source SetsHarvard University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis or Dissertation
Rightsopen

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