https://acp.copernicus.org/articles/21/2427/2021/

Potential of future stratospheric ozone loss in the midlatitudes under
global warming and sulfate geoengineering
Sabine Robrecht et al.
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Received: 24 Jul 2020 – Discussion started: 06 Aug 2020 – Revised: 11 Dec
2020 – Accepted: 22 Dec 2020 – Published: 18 Feb 2021
Abstract
The potential of heterogeneous chlorine activation in the midlatitude
lowermost stratosphere during summer is a matter of debate. The occurrence
of heterogeneous chlorine activation through the presence of aerosol
particles could cause ozone destruction. This chemical process requires low
temperatures and is accelerated by an enhancement of the stratospheric
water vapour and sulfate amount. In particular, the conditions present in
the lowermost stratosphere during the North American Summer Monsoon season
(NAM) are expected to be cold and moist enough to cause the occurrence of
heterogeneous chlorine activation. Furthermore, the temperatures, the water
vapour mixing ratio and the sulfate aerosol abundance are affected by
future global warming and by the potential application of sulfate
geoengineering. Hence, both future scenarios could promote this ozone
destruction process.

We investigate the likelihood of the occurrence of heterogeneous chlorine
activation and its impact on ozone in the lowermost-stratospheric mixing
layer between tropospheric and stratospheric air above central North
America (30.6–49.6∘ N, 72.25–124.75∘ W) in summer for conditions today, at
the middle and at the end of the 21st century. Therefore, the results of
the Geoengineering Large Ensemble Simulations (GLENS) for the
lowermost-stratospheric mixing layer between tropospheric and stratospheric
air are considered together with 10-day box-model simulations performed
with the Chemical Lagrangian Model of the Stratosphere (CLaMS). In GLENS
two future scenarios are simulated: the RCP8.5 global warming scenario and
a geoengineering scenario, where sulfur is additionally injected into the
stratosphere to keep the global mean surface temperature from changing.

In the GLENS simulations, the mixing layer will warm and moisten in both
future scenarios with a larger effect in the geoengineering scenario. The
likelihood of chlorine activation occurring in the mixing layer is highest
in the years 2040–2050 if geoengineering is applied, accounting for 3.3 %.
In comparison, the likelihood of conditions today is 1.0 %. At the end of
the 21st century, the likelihood of this ozone destruction process
occurring decreases. We found that 0.1 % of the ozone mixing ratios in the
mixing layer above central North America is destroyed for conditions today.
A maximum ozone destruction of 0.3 % in the mixing layer occurs in the
years 2040–2050 if geoengineering is applied. Comparing the southernmost
latitude band (30–35∘ N) and the northernmost latitude band (44–49∘ N) of
the considered region, we found a higher likelihood of the occurrence of
heterogeneous chlorine activation in the southernmost latitude band,
causing a higher impact on ozone as well. However, the ozone loss process
is found to have a minor impact on the midlatitude ozone column.

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