The impact of natural and anthropogenic hydrocarbons on the tropospheric budget of carbon monoxide
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Discipline
Earth and related Environmental sciences
Subject
Biomass
Carbon monoxide
Greenhouse effect
Hydrocarbon refining
Oxidation
Photochemical reactions
Troposphere
Anthropogenic hydrocarbons
Chemical transport models
Atmospheric chemistry
carbon monoxide
ethane
ethylene
hydrocarbon
isoprene
methane
propane
propylene
terpene
anthropogenic source
biogenic emission
carbon dioxide
hydrocarbon
photochemistry
troposphere
Africa
biogenesis
calculation
conference paper
controlled study
emission
measurement
model
oxidation
photochemistry
pollution transport
priority journal
South America
surface property
technique
troposphere
Audience
Scientific
Date
2000Metadata
Show full item recordDescription
A method to quantify the relative contributions of surface sources and photochemical production of atmospheric carbon monoxide has been implemented in a three-dimensional chemical-transport model. The impact of biogenic and anthropogenic hydrocarbons has been calculated. The oxidation of isoprene contributes to about 10% of the global tropospheric burden of carbon monoxide, with a maximum contribution over southern America and Africa. Oxidation of methane and terpenes contribute to 28 and 2%, respectively, of the tropospheric burden of CO. The oxidation of the other hydrocarbons, which include ethane, propane, ethylene, propylene and the surrogate hydrocarbon representing other hydrocarbons results in 12% of the CO tropospheric burden, among which 69% results from the oxidation of hydrocarbons of biologic origin. The overall global CO yield from the oxidation of isoprene is estimated to be 23% on a carbon basis. Comparisons between model results and the few available observations of isoprene, terpenes and their oxidation products show that there is no evidence that the current global isoprene emissions proposed in the IGAC/GEIA emissions data base are substantially overestimated, as suggested by previous studies. Copyright (C) 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd.A method to quantify the relative contributions of surface sources and photochemical production of atmospheric carbon monoxide has been implemented in a three-dimensional chemical-transport model. The impact of biogenic and anthropogenic hydrocarbons has been calculated. The oxidation of isoprene contributes to about 10% of the global tropospheric burden of carbon monoxide, with a maximum contribution over southern America and Africa. Oxidation of methane and terpenes contribute to 28 and 2%, respectively, of the tropospheric burden of CO. The oxidation of the other hydrocarbons, which include ethane, propane, ethylene, propylene and the surrogate hydrocarbon representing other hydrocarbons results in 12% of the CO tropospheric burden, among which 69% results from the oxidation of hydrocarbons of biologic origin. The overall global CO yield from the oxidation of isoprene is estimated to be 23% on a carbon basis. Comparisons between model results and the few available observations of isoprene, terpenes and their oxidation products show that there is no evidence that the current global isoprene emissions proposed in the IGAC/GEIA emissions data base are substantially overestimated, as suggested by previous studies.
Citation
Granier, C.; Pétron, G.; Müller, J.-F.; Brasseur, G. (2000). The impact of natural and anthropogenic hydrocarbons on the tropospheric budget of carbon monoxide. , Atmospheric Environment, Vol. 34, Issue 29-30, 5255-5270, DOI: 10.1016/S1352-2310(00)00299-5.Identifiers
scopus: 2-s2.0-0034302580
Type
Article
Peer-Review
Yes
Language
eng