Abstract
Abstract. This work reports the first comprehensive analysis of methanol concentrations in rainwater. Methanol concentrations measured in 49 rain events collected between 28 August 2007 and 10 July 2008 in Wilmington, NC, USA, ranged from below the detection limit of 6 nM to 9.3 μM with a volume-weighted average concentration of 1 ± 0.2 μM. Methanol concentrations in rainwater were up to ~200 times greater than concentrations reported previously in marine waters, indicating wet deposition as a potentially significant source of methanol to marine waters. Assuming that these methanol concentrations are an appropriate proxy for global methanol rainwater concentrations, the global methanol wet deposition sink is estimated as 20 Tg yr−1, which implies that previous methanol budgets underestimate removal by precipitation. Methanol concentrations in rainwater did not correlate significantly with H+, NO3−, and NSS, which suggests that the dominant source of the alcohol to rainwater is not anthropogenic. However, methanol concentrations were strongly correlated with acetaldehyde, which has a primarily biogenic input. The methanol volume-weighted concentration during the summer (2.7 ± 0.9 μM) was ~3 times that of the winter (0.9 ± 0.2 μM), further promoting biogenic emissions as the primary cause of temporal variations of methanol concentrations. Methanol concentrations peaked in rainwater collected during the time period 12 p.m.–6 p.m. Peaking during this period of optimal sunlight implies a possible relationship with photochemical methanol production, but there are also increases in biogenic activity during this time period. Rain events with terrestrial origin had greater concentrations than those of marine origin, demonstrating the significance of the continental source of methanol in rainwater.
Highlights
Methanol is the second most abundant volatile organic compound (VOC) in the troposphere, where it plays a significant role in atmospheric chemistry by producing O3, CO, and HCHO and decreasing OH concentrations (Millet et al, 2008)
The GEOS-chem 3D model of atmospheric chemistry indicates that methanol emissions account for 20 % of CO and HCHO production rates during spring and early summer (Hu et al, 2011)
Whereas it is generally agreed that, globally, biogenic sources account for the majority of methanol emissions, the actual percentage attributed to biogenic emissions is still under investigation (Millet et al, 2008)
Summary
Methanol is the second most abundant volatile organic compound (VOC) in the troposphere, where it plays a significant role in atmospheric chemistry by producing O3, CO, and HCHO and decreasing OH concentrations (Millet et al, 2008). The GEOS-chem 3D model of atmospheric chemistry indicates that methanol emissions account for 20 % of CO and HCHO production rates during spring and early summer (Hu et al, 2011). Methanol reacting with OH can lead to production of formic acid (Monod et al, 2000), which in turn increases acidification of rain. These various atmospheric interactions and subsequent impacts on atmospheric chemistry have led to the investigation and quantification of sources of methanol emissions. The anthropogenic contribution may be more substantial in urban areas that have larger methanol concentrations
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