TY - JOUR
T1 - Stable carbon isotope fractionation in the UV photolysis of CFC-11 and CFC-12
AU - Zuiderweg, A.T.
AU - Kaiser, J.
AU - Laube, J.C.
AU - Roeckmann, T.
AU - Holzinger, R.
PY - 2011
Y1 - 2011
N2 - The chlorofluorocarbons CFC-11 (CCl3F) and CFC-12 (CCl2F2) are stable atmospheric
compounds that are produced at the earth’s surface, but removed only at high altitudes
in the stratosphere, where their removal liberates atomic chlorine that then catalytically
destroys stratospheric ozone. For such long-lived compounds, isotope effects in the
stratospheric removal reactions have a large effect on their global isotope budgets. We
have determined the photolytic isotope fractionation for stable carbon isotopes of CFC-
11 and CFC-12 in laboratory experiments. 13C/12C isotope fractionations (ε) range
from (−23.7±0.9) to (−17.5±0.4)‰ for CFC-11 and (−69.2±3.4) to (−49.4±2.3)‰
10 for CFC-12 between 203 and 288 K, a temperature range relevant to conditions in
the troposphere and stratosphere. These results suggest that CFCs should become
strongly enriched in 13C with decreasing mixing ratio in the stratosphere, similar to what
has been recently observed for CFC chlorine isotopes. In conjunction with the strong
variations in CFC emissions before and after the Montréal Protocol, the stratospheric
enrichments should also lead to a significant temporal increase in the 13C content of the
CFCs at the surface over the past decades, which should be recorded in atmospheric
air archives such as firn air.
AB - The chlorofluorocarbons CFC-11 (CCl3F) and CFC-12 (CCl2F2) are stable atmospheric
compounds that are produced at the earth’s surface, but removed only at high altitudes
in the stratosphere, where their removal liberates atomic chlorine that then catalytically
destroys stratospheric ozone. For such long-lived compounds, isotope effects in the
stratospheric removal reactions have a large effect on their global isotope budgets. We
have determined the photolytic isotope fractionation for stable carbon isotopes of CFC-
11 and CFC-12 in laboratory experiments. 13C/12C isotope fractionations (ε) range
from (−23.7±0.9) to (−17.5±0.4)‰ for CFC-11 and (−69.2±3.4) to (−49.4±2.3)‰
10 for CFC-12 between 203 and 288 K, a temperature range relevant to conditions in
the troposphere and stratosphere. These results suggest that CFCs should become
strongly enriched in 13C with decreasing mixing ratio in the stratosphere, similar to what
has been recently observed for CFC chlorine isotopes. In conjunction with the strong
variations in CFC emissions before and after the Montréal Protocol, the stratospheric
enrichments should also lead to a significant temporal increase in the 13C content of the
CFCs at the surface over the past decades, which should be recorded in atmospheric
air archives such as firn air.
U2 - 10.5194/acpd-11-33173-2011
DO - 10.5194/acpd-11-33173-2011
M3 - Article
SN - 1680-7375
VL - 11
SP - 33173
EP - 33189
JO - Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics Discussions
JF - Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics Discussions
ER -