Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics (Dec 2011)

The isotopic composition of methane in the stratosphere: high-altitude balloon sample measurements

  • T. Röckmann,
  • M. Brass,
  • R. Borchers,
  • A. Engel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-11-13287-2011
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 24
pp. 13287 – 13304

Abstract

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The isotopic composition of stratospheric methane has been determined on a large suite of air samples from stratospheric balloon flights covering subtropical to polar latitudes and a time period of 16 yr. 154 samples were analyzed for δ<sup>13</sup>C and 119 samples for δD, increasing the previously published dataset for balloon borne samples by an order of magnitude, and more than doubling the total available stratospheric data (including aircraft samples) published to date. The samples also cover a large range in mixing ratio from tropospheric values near 1800 ppb down to only 250 ppb, and the strong isotope fractionation processes accordingly increase the isotopic composition up to δ<sup>13</sup>C = &minus;14&permil; and δD = +190&permil;, the largest enrichments observed for atmospheric CH<sub>4</sub> so far. When analyzing and comparing kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) derived from single balloon profiles, it is necessary to take into account the residence time in the stratosphere in combination with the observed mixing ratio and isotope trends in the troposphere, and the range of isotope values covered by the individual profile. The isotopic composition of CH<sub>4</sub> in the stratosphere is affected by both chemical and dynamical processes. This severely hampers interpretation of the data in terms of the relative fractions of the three important sink mechanisms (reaction with OH, O(<sup>1</sup>D) and Cl). It is shown that a formal sink partitioning using the measured data severely underestimates the fraction removed by OH, which is likely due to the insensitivity of the measurements to the kinetic fractionation in the lower stratosphere. Full quantitative interpretation of the CH<sub>4</sub> isotope data in terms of the three sink reactions requires a global model.