Publication | Open Access
Chemical Feedback From Decreasing Carbon Monoxide Emissions
107
Citations
85
References
2017
Year
Chemical EngineeringCarbon SequestrationEngineeringAtmospheric PhotochemistryGrowth RateGreenhouse Gas EmissionAtmospheric MethaneAir QualityGreenhouse Gas SequestrationClimate ModelingCarbon SinkEarth System ScienceCarbon CycleSurrogate MechanismEmission ReductionEarth ScienceChemical EmissionEarth's Climate
Abstract Understanding changes in the burden and growth rate of atmospheric methane (CH 4 ) has been the focus of several recent studies but still lacks scientific consensus. Here we investigate the role of decreasing anthropogenic carbon monoxide (CO) emissions since 2002 on hydroxyl radical (OH) sinks and tropospheric CH 4 loss. We quantify this impact by contrasting two model simulations for 2002–2013: (1) a Measurement of the Pollution in the Troposphere (MOPITT) CO reanalysis and (2) a Control‐Run without CO assimilation. These simulations are performed with the Community Atmosphere Model with Chemistry of the Community Earth System Model fully coupled chemistry climate model with prescribed CH 4 surface concentrations. The assimilation of MOPITT observations constrains the global CO burden, which significantly decreased over this period by ~20%. We find that this decrease results to (a) increase in CO chemical production, (b) higher CH 4 oxidation by OH, and (c) ~8% shorter CH 4 lifetime. We elucidate this coupling by a surrogate mechanism for CO‐OH‐CH 4 that is quantified from the full chemistry simulations.
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