Abstract

Abstract. This paper investigates the acetone variability in the upper troposphere (UT) as sampled during the CARIBIC airborne experiment and simulated by the LMDz-INCA global chemistry climate model. The aim is to (1) describe spatial distribution and temporal variability of acetone; (2) propose benchmarks deduced from the observed data set; and (3) investigate the representativeness of the observational data set. According to the model results, South Asia (including part of the Indian Ocean, all of India, China, and the Indochinese peninsula) and Europe (including Mediterranean Sea) are net source regions of acetone, where nearly 25 % of North Hemispheric (NH) primary emissions and nearly 40 % of the NH chemical production of acetone take place. The impact of these net source regions on continental upper tropospheric acetone is studied by analysing CARIBIC observations of 2006 and 2007 when most flight routes stretched between Frankfurt (Germany) and Manila (Philippines), and by focussing over 3 sub-regions where acetone variability is strong: Europe-Mediterranean, Central South China and South China Sea. Important spatial variability was observed over different scales: (1) east-west positive gradient of annually averaged acetone vmr in UT over the Eurasian continent, namely a factor two increase from east to west; (2) ocean/continent contrast with 50 % enhancement over the continents; (3) the acetone volume mixing ration (vmr) may vary in summer by more than 1000 pptv within only 5 latitude-longitude degrees; (4) the standard deviation for measurements acquired during a short flight sequence over a sub-region may reach 40 %. Temporal variability is also important: (1) the acetone volume mixing ratio (vmr) in the UT varies with the season, increasing from winter to summer by a factor 2 to 4; (2) a difference as large as 200 pptv may be observed between successive inbound and outbound flights over the same sub-region due to different flight specifications (trajectory in relation to the plume, time of day). A satisfactory agreement for the abundance of acetone is found between model results and observations, with e.g. only 30 % overestimation of the annual average over Central-South China and the South China Sea (between 450 and 600 pptv), and an underestimation by less than 20 % over Europe-Mediterranean (around 800 pptv). Consequently, annual budget terms could be computed with LMDz-INCA, yielding a global atmospheric burden of 7.2 Tg acetone, a 127 Tg yr−1 global source/sink strength, and a 21-day mean residence time. Moreover the study shows that LMDz-INCA can reproduce the impact of summer convection over China when boundary layer compounds are lifted to cruise altitude of 10–11 km and higher. The consequent enhancement of acetone vmr during summer is reproduced by LMDz-INCA, to reach agreement on an observed maximum of 970 ± 400 pptv (average during each flight sequence over the defined zone ± standard deviation). The summer enhancement of acetone is characterized by a high spatial and temporal heterogeneity, showing the necessity to increase the airborne measurement frequency over Central-South China and the South China Sea in August and September, when the annual maximum is expected (daily average model values reaching potentially 3000 pptv). In contrast, the annual cycle in the UT over Europe-Mediterranean is not reproduced by LMDz-INCA, in particular the observed summer enhancement of acetone to 1400 ± 400 pptv after long-range transport of free tropospheric air masses over North Atlantic Ocean is not reproduced. In view of the agreement on the acetone annual cycle at surface level, this disagreement in UT over Europe indicates misrepresentation of simulated transport of primary acetone or biased spatial distribution of acetone chemical sinks and secondary sources. The sink and source budget in long-range transported free tropospheric air masses may be studied by analysing atmospheric chemical composition observed by CARIBIC in summer flights between North America and Europe.

Highlights

  • Hydroxyl (OH) and hydroperoxy radical (HO2) dominate background tropospheric chemistry through their oxidative roles

  • We have described how acetone vmrs are under-estimated in summer free troposphere (FT) air masses encountered over EuropeMediterranean region, and how better agreement is found in d) summer boundary layer air mass (BL) and high clouds (HC) air masses sampled over Central-South

  • Simulaear regressions with high correlation coefficient are plotted tion results are provided by LMDz-INteraction ChemistryAerosols (INCA), a global chemin Fig. 10, for HC, FT, and BL air masses sampled in 2006 istry climate model including the oxidation of methane and and 2007 summers

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Summary

Introduction

Hydroxyl (OH) and hydroperoxy radical (HO2) dominate background tropospheric chemistry through their oxidative roles. Most recent budget studies have relied on data compiled by Emmons et al (2000): (1) the ocean source was taken into account for improving agreement over the Pacific Ocean (Jacob et al, 2002; Folberth et al, 2006); (2) the terrestrial biogenic primary emissions were modified to fit lower tropospheric observations (Jacob et al, 2002); (3) the acetone photolysis quantum yield (with its strong impact in the UT; Arnold et al, 2004) was changed to improve agreement for the vertical column (Arnold et al, 2005), especially over the Pacific Ocean. Measurements of O3 and CO are used to discuss the chemical signature of air masses, with the help of computed back-trajectories

The LMDz-INCA set-up
Budget terms
Regional features
The strategy for comparing model data with
Impact of air mass history on geographical variability
Findings
Effects of vertical gradients
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