npj Climate and Atmospheric Science (Aug 2023)

Changes in atmospheric oxidants over Arctic Ocean atmosphere: evidence of oxygen isotope anomaly in nitrate aerosols

  • Yanlin Zhang,
  • Zhuyu Zhao,
  • Fang Cao,
  • Wenhuai Song,
  • Yuchi Lin,
  • Meiyi Fan,
  • Haoran Yu,
  • Hanyu Li,
  • Yihang Hong,
  • Meng Gao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41612-023-00447-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Oxygen isotope anomaly of nitrate aerosol (∆17O-NO3 −) contributes to understanding the atmospheric nitrogen chemistry in the polar oceans. Here, ∆17O-NO3 − of the aerosol samples was analyzed based on a cruise from East Asia to the Arctic Ocean to explore the nitrate formation mechanisms. ∆17O-NO3 − decreased with the increase of latitude, especially when after entering the Arctic Circle. ∆17O-NO3 − (e.g., 11.5‰–21.2‰) was extremely low while crossing the sea ice-covered Arctic Ocean. This is most likely influenced by the combined enhancement of hydroxyl (OH) and peroxy (HO2 + RO2) radicals derived by sea ice under permanent sunlight period. In addition, the obvious increase in the ∆17O-NO3 − of return trip with shortened daytime indicated the advantage of nocturnal pathways (NO3 related) with the higher ∆17O endmembers. The mutation of ∆17O-NO3 − can reflect the change of NOx conversion pathways to nitrate, and it can be more sensitive to the change of radical chemistry related to atmospheric oxidation.