2019
DOI: 10.1029/2019jd030517
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Assessing the Seasonal Dynamics of Nitrate and Sulfate Aerosols at the South Pole Utilizing Stable Isotopes

Abstract: Atmospheric nitrate (NO3− = particulate NO3− + gas‐phase nitric acid [HNO3]) and sulfate (SO42−) are key molecules that play important roles in numerous atmospheric processes. Here, the seasonal cycles of NO3− and total suspended particulate sulfate (SO42−(TSP)) were evaluated at the South Pole from aerosol samples collected weekly for approximately 10 months (26 January to 25 October) in 2002 and analyzed for their concentration and isotopic compositions. Aerosol NO3− was largely affected by snowpack emission… Show more

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Cited by 35 publications
(66 citation statements)
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References 106 publications
(327 reference statements)
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“…(2017) and Walters et al. (2019) suggested the possibility of an increased contribution of S(IV) + HOBr during austral spring at DDU and summer at South Pole, respectively, based on the relatively low Δ 17 O(SO 4 2− ) in those seasons. However, the importance of S(IV) + HOBr remains inconclusive, since both results in those two previous works can also be explained by the contribution of OH and H 2 O 2 oxidation.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…(2017) and Walters et al. (2019) suggested the possibility of an increased contribution of S(IV) + HOBr during austral spring at DDU and summer at South Pole, respectively, based on the relatively low Δ 17 O(SO 4 2− ) in those seasons. However, the importance of S(IV) + HOBr remains inconclusive, since both results in those two previous works can also be explained by the contribution of OH and H 2 O 2 oxidation.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There are only a few reports of Δ 17 O(SO 4 2− ) observations in the present Antarctic atmosphere, and little is known about the influence of characteristic oxidation processes in Antarctica on Δ 17 O(SO 4 2− ). Δ 17 O(SO 4 2− ) observations of aerosols at three different sites, Dome C (Hill‐Falkenthal et al., 2013) and South Pole (Walters et al., 2019) on the Antarctic Plateau and coastal Antarctic station Dumont d'Urville (DDU) (Ishino et al., 2017), show similar seasonality with minima in the austral summer and higher values in the autumn to spring, which likely reflects a seasonal shift from OH‐ and H 2 O 2 ‐ to O 3 ‐dominated chemistry. In addition, Ishino et al.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The mass-independent oxygen-17 anomaly (D 17 O) is any deviation from the linear approximation of δ 17 O = 0.52 ´ δ 18 O, a relationship that describes the mass-dependent process, and can be quantified as D 17 O = δ 17 O -0.52 ´ δ 18 O (Thiemens, 1999), wherein δ 17,18 O = [( 17,18 O/ 16 O)sample/( 17,18 O/ 16 O)VSMOW -1]. Since it was discovered to be produced during the chemical formation of ozone (O3) for the first time in 1980s, (Thiemens and Heidenreich, 1983), the D 17 O has been studied extensively and proven to be a powerful tool in discerning the formation mechanisms of atmospheric sulfate (e.g., Ishino et al, 2017;Alexander et al, 2002Alexander et al, , 2005Alexander et al, , 2009Alexander et al, , 2012Li et al, 2013;Jenkins and Bao, 2006;He et al, 2018;McCabe et al, 2006;Lee and Thiemens, 2001;Dominguez et al, 2008;Walters et al, 2019;Lin et al, 2017;Lin et al, 2020). Because the oxidants transfer unique D 17 O signal to the produced sulfate (Savarino et al, 2000), D 17 O in sulfate (D 17 O(SO 2-4 )) reflects the relative importance of various oxidation pathways involved in its formation.…”
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confidence: 99%