Abstract

Ultraviolet-visible absorption spectroscopy and purge-and-trap GC-MS were used to determine the rates and products of the photodissociation of low concentrations of CH2I2, CH2IBr, and CH2ICl in water, saltwater (0.5 M NaCl), and seawater in natural sunlight. Photoproducts of these reactions include iodide (I-) and, in salt- and seawater environments, CH2XCl (where X = Cl, Br, or I). Thus, CH2ICl was produced during CH2I2 photolysis (with a molar yield of 35 +/- 20%), CH2BrCl from CH2IBr photolysis, and CH2Cl2 from CH2ICl photolysis (in lower yields of 6-10%). Formation of these chlorine-atom-substituted products may be via direct reaction of Cl- with either (A) the isopolyhalomethane photoisomer or associated ion pair (e.g., CH2I+-I-) or (B) the initially produced CH2I. photofragment. Estimated quantum yields for photodissociation were 0.62 +/- 0.09, 0.17 +/- 0.03, and 0.26 +/- 0.06 for CH2I2, CH2IBr, and CH2ICl, respectively, in 0.5 M NaCl, with only small differences from these values in water and seawater. The much higher quantum yield of CH2I2 photolysis compared to CH2IBr and CH2ICl photolysis may be explained by the higher yield of the isodiiodomethane photoisomer of CH2I2, resulting in reduced geminate recombination of the initially produced radical photofragments back to the parent molecule. We use a radiative transfer model with measured absorption cross-sections in saltwater to calculate seasonal values of CH2I2, CH2IBr, and CH2ICl photodissociation in surface seawater at midlatitudes (50 degrees N) and show that a significant proportion of CH2ICl in surface seawater may arise from CH2I2 photodecomposition. We also suggest that surface seawater photolysis of CH2I2 over an 8 h period may contribute up to approximately 10% of the surface seawater I- levels, with implications for the increased deposition of O3 to the surface ocean.

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