Abstract

Abstract. Stratospheric chemistry and denitrification are simulated for the Arctic winter 2009/2010 with the Lagrangian Chemistry and Transport Model ATLAS. A number of sensitivity runs is used to explore the impact of uncertainties in chlorine activation and denitrification on the model results. In particular, the efficiency of chlorine activation on different types of liquid aerosol versus activation on nitric acid trihydrate clouds is examined. Additionally, the impact of changes in reaction rate coefficients, in the particle number density of polar stratospheric clouds, in supersaturation, temperature or the extent of denitrification is investigated. Results are compared to satellite measurements of MLS and ACE-FTS and to in-situ measurements onboard the Geophysica aircraft during the RECONCILE measurement campaign. It is shown that even large changes in the underlying assumptions have only a small impact on the modelled ozone loss, even though they can cause considerable differences in chemical evolution of other species and in denitrification. Differences in column ozone between the sensitivity runs stay below 10% at the end of the winter. Chlorine activation on liquid aerosols alone is able to explain the observed magnitude and morphology of the mixing ratios of active chlorine, reservoir gases and ozone. This is even true for binary aerosols (no uptake of HNO3 from the gas-phase allowed in the model). Differences in chlorine activation between sensitivity runs are within 30%. Current estimates of nitric acid trihydrate (NAT) number density and supersaturation imply that, at least for this winter, NAT clouds play a relatively small role compared to liquid clouds in chlorine activation. The change between different reaction rate coefficients for liquid or solid clouds has only a minor impact on ozone loss and chlorine activation in our sensitivity runs.

Highlights

  • Ocean Science lying assumptions have only a small impact on the modelled ozone loss, even though they can cause considerable differences in chemical evolution of other species and in denitrification

  • CALIPSO satellite measurements indicate that both STS and nitric acid trihydrate (NAT) clouds were ubiquitous in the Arctic vortex in the winter 2009/2010 (Pitts et al, 2011), with number densities in a broad range from 0.001 cm−3 to 0.1 cm−3 and even higher

  • We performed sensitivity runs for the Arctic winter 2009/2010 with the Lagrangian Chemistry and Transport Model ATLAS to explore the impact of uncertainties in chlorine activation and denitrification on the model results, with a particular focus on microphysics and chemistry on polar stratospheric clouds

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Summary

Introduction

Ocean Science lying assumptions have only a small impact on the modelled ozone loss, even though they can cause considerable differences in chemical evolution of other species and in denitrification. We use runs of the global Chemistry and Transport Model ATLAS (Wohltmann and Rex, 2009; Wohltmann et al, 2010) to give an overview over the chemical evolution of the winter 2009/2010 and to assess the impact of the major uncertainties in the model formulation on the chemical results of the model This winter was selected due to the large number of datasets available from the campaign for comparison in this winter. In a related study, Wegner et al (2012) validate the heterogeneous chemistry parameterisations with in-situ measurements of ClO from 2005 and 2010 and show that activation on cold background aerosol is sufficient to explain the measurements They show that there is no correlation between chlorine activation and the formation of PSCs (depletion of gas-phase HNO3) in MLS data

Model overview
The heterogeneous chemistry module
Model setup
Sensitivity runs
Satellite instruments used for initialisation and comparison
Chemical initialisation
Meteorological situation
Chlorine activation
Reservoir gases
Ozone loss
Denitrification
Long-lived tracers
Findings
Discussion
Conclusions

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