Abstract

Abstract. We report on HCFC-22 data acquired by the Michelson Interferometer for Passive Atmospheric Sounding (MIPAS) in the reduced spectral resolution nominal observation mode. The data cover the period from January 2005 to April 2012 and the altitude range from the upper troposphere (above cloud top altitude) to about 50 km. The profile retrieval was performed by constrained nonlinear least squares fitting of modelled spectra to the measured limb spectral radiances. The spectral ν4-band at 816.5 ± 13 cm−1 was used for the retrieval. A Tikhonov-type smoothing constraint was applied to stabilise the retrieval. In the lower stratosphere, we find a global volume mixing ratio of HCFC-22 of about 185 pptv in January 2005. The rate of linear growth in the lower latitudes lower stratosphere was about 6 to 7 pptv year−1 in the period 2005–2012. The profiles obtained were compared with ACE-FTS satellite data v3.5, as well as with MkIV balloon profiles and cryosampler balloon measurements. Between 13 and 22 km, average agreement within −3 to +5 pptv (MIPAS – ACE) with ACE-FTS v3.5 profiles is demonstrated. Agreement with MkIV solar occultation balloon-borne measurements is within 10–20 pptv below 30 km and worse above, while in situ cryosampler balloon measurements are systematically lower over their full altitude range by 15–50 pptv below 24 km and less than 10 pptv above 28 km. MIPAS HCFC-22 time series below 10 km altitude are shown to agree mostly well to corresponding time series of near-surface abundances from the NOAA/ESRL and AGAGE networks, although a more pronounced seasonal cycle is obvious in the satellite data. This is attributed to tropopause altitude fluctuations and subsidence of polar winter stratospheric air into the troposphere. A parametric model consisting of constant, linear, quasi-biennial oscillation (QBO) and several sine and cosine terms with different periods has been fitted to the temporal variation of stratospheric HCFC-22 for all 10°-latitude/1-to-2-km-altitude bins. The relative linear variation was always positive, with relative increases of 40–70 % decade−1 in the tropics and global lower stratosphere, and up to 120 % decade−1 in the upper stratosphere of the northern polar region and the southern extratropical hemisphere. Asian HCFC-22 emissions have become the major source of global upper tropospheric HCFC-22. In the upper troposphere, monsoon air, rich in HCFC-22, is instantaneously mixed into the tropics. In the middle stratosphere, between 20 and 30 km, the observed trend is inconsistent with the trend at the surface (corrected for the age of stratospheric air), hinting at circulation changes. There exists a stronger positive trend in HCFC-22 in the Southern Hemisphere and a more muted positive trend in the Northern Hemisphere, implying a potential change in the stratospheric circulation over the observation period.

Highlights

  • HCFC-22 (CHClF2) is a chlorine source gas and a greenhouse gas (IPCC, 2014)

  • The retrieval of HCFC-22 profiles presented here was performed with a Michelson Interferometer for Passive Atmospheric Sounding (MIPAS) data processor dedicated for research applications, which has been developed at the Institut für Meteorologie und Klimaforschung (IMK) in cooperation with the Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía (IAA)

  • The large number of collocations with Atmospheric Chemistry Experiment – Fourier Transform Spectrometer (ACE-Fourier transform spectrometer (FTS)) leads to a high statistical significance of deviations with respect to noise

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Summary

Introduction

HCFC-22 (CHClF2) is a chlorine source gas and a greenhouse gas (IPCC, 2014). The sources of HCFC-22 are anthropogenic emissions due to its use as a propellant and refrigerant. Among recently flying space-borne instruments, only the Atmospheric Chemistry Experiment – Fourier Transform Spectrometer (ACE-FTS; solar occultation) and the Michelson Interferometer for Passive Atmospheric Sounding (MIPAS; limb emission) have been providing measurements of HCFC-22 (Kolonjari et al, 2012; Park et al, 2014; Moore and Remedios, 2008). In this paper we present and discuss HCFC-22 distributions and time series as retrieved with the MIPAS data processor developed and operated by the Institute for Meteorology and Climate Research at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT-IMK) in Germany in cooperation with the Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía (IAA, CSIC) in Granada, Spain. The retrieval of HCFC-22 profiles presented here was performed with a MIPAS data processor dedicated for research applications, which has been developed at the Institut für Meteorologie und Klimaforschung (IMK) in cooperation with the Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía (IAA). The general strategy of the IMK/IAA data processing has been documented in von Clarmann et al (2003)

Retrieval of HCFC-22
Diagnostics
Comparison with ACE-FTS
Comparison with cryosampler profiles
Comparison with MkIV balloon interferometer profiles
Summary of the intercomparisons
Zonal means
Time series analysis of HCFC-22 for various altitudes and latitudes
Trend of HCFC-22
Comparisons between upper tropospheric and surface growth rates
The surface networks
Comparison with MIPAS
Unexplained stratospheric trends
Findings
Summary and conclusions
Full Text
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