The annual cycle of hydrogen peroxide: an indicator of chemical instability?
Item
Title (Dublin Core)
The annual cycle of hydrogen peroxide: an indicator of chemical instability?
Description (Dublin Core)
A box model has been used to study the annual cycle in hydrogen peroxide concentrations with the objective of determining whether the observed difference in summer and winter values reflects instability in the underlying photochemistry. The model is run in both steady-state and time-dependent modes. The steady-state calculations show that, for some range of NO<sub>x</sub> background levels, two stable solutions to the continuity equations exist for a period of days in spring and fall. The corresponding time-dependent model indicates that, for sufficiently high background NO<sub>x</sub> concentrations, the spring and fall changes in H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub> concentration may be interpreted as a forced transition between the two underlying stable regimes. The spring transition is more rapid than that in fall, an asymmetry that becomes more marked as background NO<sub>x</sub> increases. This asymmetry is related to the different time scales involved in chemical production and loss of H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub>. Observations of the spring increase in H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub> concentration may therefore provide a better measure of the change in the underlying chemical regime than does the fall decrease. The model results developed in this paper will be compared with two sets of observations that cover annual variations of peroxide concentrations under different background pollution conditions.
Creator (Dublin Core)
Stewart, R. W.
Date (Dublin Core)
2018-06-28
Type (Dublin Core)
Text
Format (Dublin Core)
application/pdf
Identifier (Dublin Core)
10.5194/acp-4-933-2004
https://acp.copernicus.org/articles/4/933/2004/
Source (Dublin Core)
eISSN: 1680-7324
Language (Dublin Core)
eng



