Ju. Grooss et al., IMPACT OF AIRCRAFT EMISSIONS ON TROPOSPHERIC AND STRATOSPHERIC OZONE - PART I - CHEMISTRY AND 2-D MODEL RESULTS, Atmospheric environment, 32(18), 1998, pp. 3173-3184
The impact of air-traffic-induced NOx and water vapor emissions on the
chemical composition of the global troposphere and stratosphere is in
vestigated for current conditions (1991) and a future scenario (2015).
The NOx dependence of ozone chemistry is studied using photochemical
steady-stale calculations for a typical upper tropospheric chemical co
mposition. These calculations demonstrate that above a critical NOx mi
xing ratio of about 0.3 ppbv, additional NOx emitted by aircraft can a
ctually decrease the net ozone production, whereas below this value th
ere is the commonly accepted increase in ozone production. Subsequentl
y, we assess the impact of aircraft emissions on photochemical ozone p
roduction using the Mainz two-dimensional photochemical model includin
g effects of heterogeneous chemistry in the lower stratosphere. Based
on not well-represented convection, 2-D models generally underestimate
background values of NOx in the free troposphere, hence overestimate
the ozone increase caused by subsonic aircraft. In particular, convect
ion might shift the NOx mixing ratio above the critical 0.3 ppbv level
. To correctly reproduce the impact of this non-linear relation on ozo
ne, a 3-D model calculation is essential, especially for mid-latitude
summer, where significant convection take place. For northern winters,
where due to weak convection the 2-D calculations are most appropriat
e, current aircraft emissions are calculated to yield a tropospheric o
zone increase of about 3% and little effect on stratospheric ozone. Fo
r the case of installation of 500 commercial supersonic transport in t
he year 2015 (flight altitude 18-21 km, cruise speed Mach 2.4, emissio
n index 15 g NO2 kg(-1) fuel), ozone decreases of 3% in the lower pola
r stratosphere are predicted leading to decreases in ozone columns by
up to 1.5%. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.