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      A large atomic chlorine source inferred from mid-continental reactive nitrogen chemistry.

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          Abstract

          Halogen atoms and oxides are highly reactive and can profoundly affect atmospheric composition. Chlorine atoms can decrease the lifetimes of gaseous elemental mercury and hydrocarbons such as the greenhouse gas methane. Chlorine atoms also influence cycles that catalytically destroy or produce tropospheric ozone, a greenhouse gas potentially toxic to plant and animal life. Conversion of inorganic chloride into gaseous chlorine atom precursors within the troposphere is generally considered a coastal or marine air phenomenon. Here we report mid-continental observations of the chlorine atom precursor nitryl chloride at a distance of 1,400 km from the nearest coastline. We observe persistent and significant nitryl chloride production relative to the consumption of its nitrogen oxide precursors. Comparison of these findings to model predictions based on aerosol and precipitation composition data from long-term monitoring networks suggests nitryl chloride production in the contiguous USA alone is at a level similar to previous global estimates for coastal and marine regions. We also suggest that a significant fraction of tropospheric chlorine atoms may arise directly from anthropogenic pollutants.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Nature
          Nature
          1476-4687
          0028-0836
          Mar 11 2010
          : 464
          : 7286
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195, USA. thornton@atmos.washington.edu
          Article
          nature08905
          10.1038/nature08905
          20220847
          46bffc29-1af4-4da0-8b3d-1adac0de76e6
          History

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