Ozone destruction through heterogeneous chemistry following the eruption of El Chichón

Abstract
It is now well established that heterogeneous reactions provide an important mechanism for Antarctic ozone depletion. Recent laboratory studies suggest that the same reactions that occur on HNO3/H2O ice clouds in the cold Antarctic stratosphere can also take place on sulfuric acid particles (e.g., volcanic and background aerosols) typical of lower latitudes, albeit at slower rates. The reduction in stratospheric ozone observed at northern mid‐latitudes in late 1982 through 1983 following the volcanic eruption of El Chichón is investigated in terms of ozone loss through heterogeneous chemistry on the aerosol which formed in the stratosphere. The rates of the relevant heterogeneous reactions are believed to be critically dependent on (1) the aerosol surface area density and (2) the percent by weight sulfuric acid in the liquid particles. Direct measurements of both of these important quantities for El Chichón aerosol are described and used as a basis for model calculations of their possible effects on ozone and other trace species. The observed volcanic particle surface area reached a maximum at mid‐latitudes of about 50 μm2cm−3(above a typical background value of about 0.75) at an altitude of 18–20 km in early 1983. This enhancement of surface area is about the same as that encountered in stratospheric clouds in the Antarctic, suggesting a possible basis for ozone depletion through heterogeneous chemistry. Observations of NO2and HNO3also suggest that heterogeneous reactions on both background and volcanic aerosol play a significant role in partitioning reactive nitrogen species in middle and high latitudes in winter. It is shown that heterogeneous reactions similar to those occurring in Antarctica may have been responsible for at least a portion of the anomalous ozone reduction observed at mid‐latitudes in early 1983.