On the stratospheric chemistry of midlatitude wildfire smoke

Massive Australian wildfires lofted smoke directly into the stratosphere in the austral summer of 2019/20. The smoke led to increases in optical extinction throughout the midlatitudes of the southern hemisphere that rivalled substantial volcanic perturbations. Previous studies have assumed that the smoke became coated with sulfuric acid and water and would deplete the ozone layer through heterogeneous chemistry on those surfaces, as is routinely observed following volcanic enhancements of the stratospheric sulfate layer. Here, observations of extinction and reactive nitrogen species from multiple independent satellites that sampled the smoke region are compared to one another and to model calculations. The data display a strong decrease in reactive nitrogen concentrations with increased aerosol extinction in the stratosphere, which is a known fingerprint for key heterogeneous chemistry on sulfate/H2O particles (specifically the hydrolysis of N2O5 to form HNO3). This chemical shift affects not only reactive nitrogen but also chlorine and reactive hydrogen species and is expected to cause midlatitude ozone layer depletion. Comparison of the model ozone to observations suggests that N2O5 hydrolys is contributed to reduced ozone, but additional chemical and/or dynamical processes are also important. These findings suggest that if wildfire smoke injection into the stratosphere increases sufficiently in frequency and magnitude as the world warms due to climate change, ozone recovery under the Montreal Protocol could be impeded, at least sporadically. Modeled austral midlatitude total ozone loss was about 1% in March 2020, which is significant compared to expected ozone recovery of about 1% per decade.

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Author Solomon, Susan
Dube, Kimberlee
Stone, Kane
Yu, Pengfei
Kinnison, Doug
Toon, Owen B.
Strahan, Susan E.
Rosenlof, Karen H.
Portmann, Robert
Davis, Sean
Randel, William
Bernath, Peter
Boone, Chris
Bardeen, Charles G.
Bourassa, Adam
Zawada, Daniel
Degenstein, Doug
Publisher UCAR/NCAR - Library
Publication Date 2022-03-01T00:00:00
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) Not Assigned
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Resource Version N/A
Topic Category geoscientificInformation
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Metadata Date 2023-08-18T18:34:43.585143
Metadata Record Identifier edu.ucar.opensky::articles:25193
Metadata Language eng; USA
Suggested Citation Solomon, Susan, Dube, Kimberlee, Stone, Kane, Yu, Pengfei, Kinnison, Doug, Toon, Owen B., Strahan, Susan E., Rosenlof, Karen H., Portmann, Robert, Davis, Sean, Randel, William, Bernath, Peter, Boone, Chris, Bardeen, Charles G., Bourassa, Adam, Zawada, Daniel, Degenstein, Doug. (2022). On the stratospheric chemistry of midlatitude wildfire smoke. UCAR/NCAR - Library. http://n2t.net/ark:/85065/d72r3w7c. Accessed 18 July 2025.

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