Nitrogen oxides are essential for the formation of secondary atmospheric aerosols and of atmospheric oxidants such as ozone and the hydroxyl radical, which controls the self-cleansing capacity of the atmosphere. Nitric acid, a major oxidation product of nitrogen oxides, has traditionally been considered to be a permanent sink of nitrogen oxides. However, model studies predict higher ratios of nitric acid to nitrogen oxides in the troposphere than are observed. A renoxification process that recycles nitric acid in nitrogen oxides has been proposed to reconcile observations with model studies, but the mechanisms responsible for this process remain uncertain. Here we present data from an aircraft measurement campaign over the North Atlantic Ocean and find evidence for rapid recycling of nitric acid to nitrous acid and nitrogen oxides in the clean marine boundary layer via particulate nitrate collected on filters at a rate more than two orders of magnitude greater than that of gaseous nitric acid, with nitrous acid as the main product.
Revised: January 28, 2021 |
Published: April 28, 2016
Citation
Ye C., X. Zhou, D. Pu, J. Stutz, J. Festa, M. Spolaor, and C. Tsai, et al. 2016.Rapid cycling of reactive nitrogen in the marine boundary layer.Nature 532, no. 7600:489-491.PNNL-SA-118669.doi:10.1038/nature17195