Authors
Dylan B Millet, Munkhbayar Baasandorj, Delphine K Farmer, Joel A Thornton, Karsten Baumann, Patrick Brophy, Sreelekha Chaliyakunnel, Joost A de Gouw, M Graus, L Hu, A Koss, BH Lee, FD Lopez-Hilfiker, JA Neuman, F Paulot, J Peischl, IB Pollack, TB Ryerson, C Warneke, BJ Williams, J Xu
Publication date
2015/6/9
Journal
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Volume
15
Issue
11
Pages
6283-6304
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Description
Formic acid (HCOOH) is one of the most abundant acids in the atmosphere, with an important influence on precipitation chemistry and acidity. Here we employ a chemical transport model (GEOS-Chem CTM) to interpret recent airborne and ground-based measurements over the US Southeast in terms of the constraints they provide on HCOOH sources and sinks. Summertime boundary layer concentrations average several parts-per-billion, 2–3× larger than can be explained based on known production and loss pathways. This indicates one or more large missing HCOOH sources, and suggests either a key gap in current understanding of hydrocarbon oxidation or a large, unidentified, direct flux of HCOOH. Model-measurement comparisons implicate biogenic sources (e.g., isoprene oxidation) as the predominant HCOOH source. Resolving the unexplained boundary layer concentrations based (i) solely on isoprene oxidation would require a 3× increase in the model HCOOH yield, or (ii) solely on direct HCOOH emissions would require approximately a 25× increase in its biogenic flux. However, neither of these can explain the high HCOOH amounts seen in anthropogenic air masses and in the free troposphere. The overall indication is of a large biogenic source combined with ubiquitous chemical production of HCOOH across a range of precursors. Laboratory work is needed to better quantify the rates and mechanisms of carboxylic acid production from isoprene and other prevalent organics. Stabilized Criegee intermediates (SCIs) provide a large model source of HCOOH, while acetaldehyde tautomerization accounts for ~ 15% of the simulated …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
DB Millet, M Baasandorj, DK Farmer, JA Thornton… - Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 2015