We present a new
chemical mechanism for Hg0/HgI/HgII atmospheric cycling, including recent laboratory
and computational data, and implement it in the GEOS-Chem global atmospheric
chemistry model for comparison to observations. Our mechanism includes
the oxidation of Hg0 by Br and OH, subsequent oxidation
of HgI by ozone and radicals, respeciation of HgII in aerosols and cloud droplets, and speciated HgII photolysis
in the gas and aqueous phases. The tropospheric Hg lifetime against
deposition in the model is 5.5 months, consistent with observational
constraints. The model reproduces the observed global surface Hg0 concentrations and HgII wet deposition fluxes.
Br and OH make comparable contributions to global net oxidation of
Hg0 to HgII. Ozone is the principal HgI oxidant, enabling the efficient oxidation of Hg0 to HgII by OH. BrHgIIOH and HgII(OH)2, the initial HgII products of Hg0 oxidation,
respeciate in aerosols and clouds to organic and inorganic complexes,
and volatilize to photostable forms. Reduction of HgII to
Hg0 takes place largely through photolysis of aqueous HgII–organic complexes. 71% of model HgII deposition
is to the oceans. Major uncertainties for atmospheric Hg chemistry
modeling include Br concentrations, stability and reactions of HgI, and speciation and photoreduction of HgII in
aerosols and clouds.
Abstract. Air quality models have not been able to reproduce the magnitude of the
observed concentrations of fine particulate matter (PM2.5) during
wintertime Chinese haze events. The discrepancy has been at least partly
attributed to low biases in modeled sulfate production rates, due to the lack
of heterogeneous sulfate production on aerosols
in the models. In this study, we explicitly implement four heterogeneous sulfate formation
mechanisms into a regional chemical transport model, in addition to
gas-phase and in-cloud sulfate production. We compare the model results with
observations of sulfate concentrations and oxygen isotopes, Δ17O(SO42-), in the winter of 2014–2015, the latter of which
is highly sensitive to the relative importance of different sulfate
production mechanisms. Model results suggest that heterogeneous sulfate
production on aerosols accounts for about 20 % of sulfate production in
clean and polluted conditions, partially reducing the modeled low bias in
sulfate concentrations. Model sensitivity studies in comparison with the
Δ17O(SO42-) observations suggest that heterogeneous
sulfate formation is dominated by transition metal ion-catalyzed oxidation of SO2.
Ambient fine particulate matter (PM2.5) is the world’s leading environmental health risk factor. Reducing the PM2.5 disease burden requires specific strategies that target dominant sources across multiple spatial scales. We provide a contemporary and comprehensive evaluation of sector- and fuel-specific contributions to this disease burden across 21 regions, 204 countries, and 200 sub-national areas by integrating 24 global atmospheric chemistry-transport model sensitivity simulations, high-resolution satellite-derived PM2.5 exposure estimates, and disease-specific concentration response relationships. Globally, 1.05 (95% Confidence Interval: 0.74–1.36) million deaths were avoidable in 2017 by eliminating fossil-fuel combustion (27.3% of the total PM2.5 burden), with coal contributing to over half. Other dominant global sources included residential (0.74 [0.52–0.95] million deaths; 19.2%), industrial (0.45 [0.32–0.58] million deaths; 11.7%), and energy (0.39 [0.28–0.51] million deaths; 10.2%) sectors. Our results show that regions with large anthropogenic contributions generally had the highest attributable deaths, suggesting substantial health benefits from replacing traditional energy sources.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.