Abstract

Abstract. Biogenic volatile organic compounds (BVOCs) such as isoprene constitute a large proportion of the global atmospheric oxidant sink. Their reactions in the atmosphere contribute to processes such as ozone production and secondary organic aerosol formation. However, over the tropical rainforest, where 50 % of the global emissions of BVOCs are believed to occur, atmospheric chemistry models have been unable to simulate concurrently the measured daytime concentration of isoprene and that of its principal oxidant, hydroxyl (OH). One reason for this model-measurement discrepancy may be incomplete mixing of isoprene within the convective boundary layer, leading to patchiness or segregation in isoprene and OH mixing ratios and average concentrations that appear to be incompatible with each other. One way of capturing this effect in models of atmospheric chemistry is to use a reduced effective rate constant for their reaction. Recent studies comparing atmospheric chemistry global/box models with field measurements have suggested that this effective rate reduction may be as large as 50 %; which is at the upper limit of that calculated using large eddy simulation models. To date there has only been one field campaign worldwide that has reported co-located measurements of isoprene and OH at the necessary temporal resolution to calculate the segregation of these compounds. However many campaigns have recorded sufficiently high resolution isoprene measurements to capture the small-scale fluctuations in its concentration. Assuming uniform distributions of other OH production and loss processes, we use a box model of atmospheric chemistry, constrained by the spectrum of isoprene concentrations measured, as a virtual instrument, to estimate the variability in OH at a point and hence, to estimate the segregation intensity of isoprene and OH from high-frequency isoprene time series. The method successfully reproduces the only directly observed segregation, using measurements made in a deciduous forest in Germany. The effective rate constant reduction for the reaction of isoprene and OH over a South-East Asian rainforest is calculated to be typically <15 %. Although there are many unconstrained uncertainties, the likely nature of those processes suggests that this value represents an upper limit. The estimate is not sensitive to heterogeneities in NO at this remote site, unless they are correlated with those of isoprene, or to OH-recycling schemes in the isoprene oxidation mechanism, unless the recycling happens in the first reaction step. Segregation alone is therefore unlikely to be the sole cause of model-measurement discrepancies for isoprene and OH above a rainforest.

Highlights

  • The volatile organic compound (VOC) isoprene (C5H8) is believed to account for 44 % of global biogenic emissions of VOCs (Guenther et al, 1995)

  • To test the approach described above before making calculations for the OP3 campaign, the model was run for 4 h between 10:00 and 14:00 LT using an isoprene concentration time series produced by generating random numbers according to the distribution statistics specified in Dlugi et al (2010)

  • As only limited information about the physical and chemical characteristics of the Dlugi et al (2010) measurement site were available, the model setup used for OP3 was retained with the following exceptions: The box was positioned at 50◦ 54 N, 6◦24 E, with NO emissions from the Yienger and Levy (1995) inventory for that location being used

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Summary

Introduction

The volatile organic compound (VOC) isoprene (C5H8) is believed to account for 44 % of global biogenic emissions of VOCs (Guenther et al, 1995). M. Pugh et al.: Influence of variations in isoprene concentrations on atmospheric chemistry emissions of isoprene occur, for instance the tropical rainforest or mid-latitude deciduous forests, should see suppression of hydroxyl radical (OH) concentrations in the boundary layer (Wang et al, 1998; Lawrence et al, 1999; Granier et al, 2000; Poisson et al, 2000; Lelieveld et al, 2002; von Kuhlmann et al, 2004; Jockel et al, 2006). We use high temporal resolution isoprene concentration measurements (Langford et al, 2010) made over a southeast Asian rainforest as part of the OP3 campaign (Hewitt et al, 2010), in conjunction with a box model of atmospheric chemistry, which is used as a virtual instrument to estimate [OH], and estimate the intensity of segregation of isoprene and OH in this region.

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