Abstract

Abstract. The Michelson Interferometer for Passive Atmospheric Sounding (MIPAS) measured the middle-infrared limb emission spectrum of the atmosphere from 2002 to 2012 on board ENVISAT, a polar-orbiting satellite. Recently, the European Space Agency (ESA) completed the final reprocessing of MIPAS measurements, using version 8 of the level 1 and level 2 processors, which include more accurate models, processing strategies, and auxiliary data. The list of retrieved gases has been extended, and it now includes a number of new species with weak emission features in the MIPAS spectral range. The new retrieved trace species include carbonyl chloride (COCl2), also called phosgene. Due to its toxicity, its use has been reduced over the years; however, it is still used by chemical industries for several applications. Besides its direct injection in the troposphere, stratospheric phosgene is mainly produced from the photolysis of CCl4, a molecule present in the atmosphere because of human activity. Since phosgene has a long stratospheric lifetime, it must be carefully monitored as it is involved in the ozone destruction cycles, especially over the winter polar regions. In this paper we exploit the ESA MIPAS version 8 data in order to discuss the phosgene distribution, variability, and trends in the middle and lower stratosphere and in the upper troposphere. The zonal averages show that phosgene volume mixing ratio is larger in the stratosphere, with a peak of 40 pptv (parts per trillion by volume) between 50 and 30 hPa at equatorial latitudes, while at middle and polar latitudes it varies from 10 to 25 pptv. A moderate seasonal variability is observed in polar regions, mostly between 80 and 50 hPa. The comparison of MIPAS–ENVISAT COCl2 v8 profiles with the ones retrieved from MIPAS balloon and ACE-FTS (Atmospheric Chemistry Experiment – Fourier Transform Spectrometer) measurements highlights a negative bias of about 2 pptv, mainly in polar and mid-latitude regions. Part of this bias is attributed to the fact that the ESA level 2 v8 processor uses an updated spectroscopic database. For the trend computation, a fixed pressure grid is used to interpolate the phosgene profiles, and, for each pressure level, VMR (volume mixing ratio) monthly averages are computed in pre-defined 10∘ wide latitude bins. Then, for each latitudinal bin and pressure level, a regression model has been fitted to the resulting time series in order to derive the atmospheric trends. We find that the phosgene trends are different in the two hemispheres. The analysis shows that the stratosphere of the Northern Hemisphere is characterized by a negative trend of about −7 pptv per decade, while in the Southern Hemisphere phosgene mixing ratios increase with a rate of the order of +4 pptv per decade. This behavior resembles the stratospheric trend of CCl4, which is the main stratospheric source of COCl2. In the upper troposphere a positive trend is found in both hemispheres.

Highlights

  • Phosgene (COCl2) is a poisonous gas that was used as chemical weapon during the First World War (Fitzgerald, 2008)

  • The analysis shows that the stratosphere of the Northern Hemisphere is characterized by a negative trend of about −7 pptv per decade, while in the Southern Hemisphere phosgene mixing ratios increase with a rate of the order of +4 pptv per decade

  • To the best of our knowledge, the only available COCl2 measurements that cover the time period of the Environmental Satellite (ENVISAT) mission are those of the Atmospheric Chemistry Experiment – Fourier Transform Spectrometer (ACE-FTS) and those of the balloon version of the Michelson Interferometer for Passive Atmospheric Sounding (MIPAS) instrument (MIPAS-B)

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Summary

Introduction

Phosgene (COCl2) is a poisonous gas that was used as chemical weapon during the First World War (Fitzgerald, 2008). To a lesser extent, from the atmospheric degradation of the anthropogenic chlorinated very short-lived substances (VSLSs), which have a tropospheric lifetime under 6 months These are dichloromethane (methylene chloride, CH2Cl2), chloroform (trichloromethane, CHCl3), tetrachloroethene (perchloroethylene, CCl2CCl2, shortened to C2Cl4), trichloroethene (C2HCl3), and dichloroethane (CH2ClCH2Cl), the most abundant of them being CH2Cl2, (65 % of the whole chlorinated VSLS budget), CHCl3 (20 %), and CH2ClCH2Cl (13 %). Long-term records are important to study the COCl2 temporal variation that, in turn, provides information on the temporal variation in the substances responsible for its production, namely CCl4, CH3CCl3, and Cl-containing VSLSs. Recently Harrison et al (2019) estimated the trend of COCl2 from ACE-FTS measurements in the period 2004–2016 and compared the results with the TOMCAT/SLIMCAT threedimensional chemical transport model (CTM).

MIPAS measurements and retrievals
COCl2 average distribution and variability
Comparisons to balloon and other satellite measurements
Comparison to ACE-FTS
Comparison to MIPAS balloon
14 June 2005 6 June 2008
Phosgene trends
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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