Abstract

Abstract. We present a comparison of aircraft measurements of halogenated very short lived substances (VSLSs) and dimethyl sulphide (DMS, C2H6S) from a co-ordinated campaign in January–February 2014 in the tropical west Pacific. Measurements were made on the NASA Global Hawk, NCAR Gulfstream-V High-performance Instrumented Airborne Platform for Environmental Research (GV HIAPER) and UK Facility for Airborne Atmospheric Measurements (FAAM) BAe-146 (see Sect. 2.2) using four separate gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC-MS) instruments: one operated by the University of Miami (UoM), one from the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) and two from the University of York (UoY). DMS was measured on the BAe-146 and GV. The instruments were inter-calibrated for halocarbons during the campaign period using two gas standards on separate scales: a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) SX-3581 standard representative of clean low-hydrocarbon air, and an Essex canister prepared by UoM, representative of coastal air, which was higher in VSLS and hydrocarbon content. UoY and NCAR use the NOAA scale/standard for VSLS calibration, and UoM uses a scale based on dilutions of primary standards calibrated by GC with FID (flame ionisation detector) and AED (atomic emission detector). Analysis of the NOAA SX-3581 standard resulted in good agreement for CH2Cl2, CHCl3, CHBr3, CH2Br2, CH2BrCl, CHBrCl2, CHBr2Cl, CH3I, CH2ICl and CH2I2 (average relative standard deviation (RSD) < 10 %). Agreement was in general slightly poorer for the UoM Essex canister with an RSD of < 13 %. Analyses of CHBrCl2 and CHBr3 in this standard however showed significant variability, most likely due to co-eluting contaminant peaks, and a high concentration of CHBr3, respectively. These issues highlight the importance of calibration at atmospherically relevant concentrations ( ∼ 0.5–5 ppt for VSLSs; see Fig. 5 for individual ranges). The UoY in situ GC-MS measurements on board the BAe-146 compare favourably with ambient data from NCAR and UoM; however the UoY whole-air samples showed a negative bias for some lower-volatility compounds. This systematic bias could be attributed to sample line losses. Considering their large spatial variability, DMS and CH3I displayed good cross-platform agreement without any sampling bias, likely due to their higher volatility. After a correction was performed based upon the UoY in situ vs. whole-air data, all four instrument datasets show good agreement across a range of VSLSs, with combined mean absolute percentage errors (MAPEs) of the four platforms throughout the vertical profiles ranging between 2.2 (CH2Br2) and 15 (CH3I) % across a large geographic area of the tropical west Pacific. This study shows that the international VSLS calibration scales and instrumental techniques discussed here are in generally good agreement (within ∼ 10 % across a range of VSLSs), but that losses in aircraft sampling lines can add a major source of uncertainty. Overall, the measurement uncertainty of bromocarbons during these campaigns is much less than the uncertainty in the quantity of VSLS bromine estimated to reach the stratosphere of between 2 and 8 pptv.

Highlights

  • Halogenated very short lived substances (VSLSs) are defined as having atmospheric lifetimes shorter than tropospheric transport timescales, i.e. of around 6 months

  • On board the FAAM BAe-146, air samples were analysed by the University of York (UoY) both by an in situ gas chromatograph– mass spectrometer and offline as whole-air samples (whole-air sampler (WAS), coloured blue in figures) by a separate gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC-MS)

  • Air samples captured by the NSF/National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) GV and the NASA Global Hawk were analysed by the University of Miami (UoM) and hereto referred to by the collection apparatus name: Advanced Whole Air Sampler (AWAS, coloured red in figures)

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Summary

Introduction

Halogenated very short lived substances (VSLSs) are defined as having atmospheric lifetimes shorter than tropospheric transport timescales, i.e. of around 6 months. Global distributions and controls of VSLS emissions are not well known, exacerbated by large spatial variability in sea–air fluxes (Carpenter et al, 2005; Archer et al, 2007; Ziska et al, 2013; Stemmler et al, 2013; Orlikowska and Schulz-Bull, 2009) These are important considerations as deep convection in the tropics can rapidly transport VSLSs to the upper troposphere– lower stratosphere (UTLS) and make a significant contribution to photochemical ozone depletion (Von Glasow et al, 2004; Salawitch et al, 2005; Yang et al, 2005; Montzka et al, 2011; Saiz-Lopez et al, 2012; Feng et al, 2007; Laube et al, 2008; Sinnhuber and Meul, 2015). It affects the Earth’s radiation budget and climate as an important aerosol and cloud condensation nuclei precursor

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