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Carbonyl oceanic emission

Biogenic Sulfur Emissions from the Ocean. The ocean is a source of many reduced sulfur compounds to the atmosphere. These include dimethylsulfide (DMS) (2.4.51. carbon disulfide (CS2) (28). hydrogen sulfide (H2S) (291. carbonyl sulfide (OCS) (30.311. and methyl mercaptan (CH3SH) ( ). The oxidation of DMS leads to sulfate formation. CS2 and OCS are relatively unreactive in the troposphere and are transported to the stratosphere where they undergo photochemical oxidation (22). Marine H2S and CH3SH probably contribute to sulfate formation over the remote oceans, yet the sea-air transfer of these compounds is only a few percent that of DMS (2). [Pg.370]

In the last 150 years the anthropogenic emission of sulfur has increased dramatically, primarily due to combustion processes [1]. In the 1950s anthropogenic emission surpassed natural emission and the atmospheric sulfur cycle is one of the most perturbed biogeochemical cycles [1,2]. The oceans are the largest natural source of atmospheric sulfur emissions, where sulfur is emitted in a reduced form, predominantly as dimethyl sulfide (DMS) and to a much lesser extent carbonyl sulfide (OCS) and carbon disulfide (CS2) [3]. Ocean emitted DMS and CS2 are initially oxidised to OCS, which diffuses through the troposphere into the stratosphere where further oxidation to sulfur dioxide (SO2), sulfur trioxide (SO3) and finally sulfuric acid (H2SO4) occurs [1-4]. [Pg.138]

Carbonyl sulfide, OCS 500 ppt Uniform Soils and marshes, 0.3 Emission from ocean, 0.3 Oxidation of CS2 and DMS, 0.5 Uptake by vegetation, 0.5 Reaction with OH, 0.13 Loss to the stratosphere, 0.1 7yr... [Pg.346]


See other pages where Carbonyl oceanic emission is mentioned: [Pg.662]    [Pg.347]    [Pg.258]    [Pg.2924]    [Pg.4247]    [Pg.263]    [Pg.10]    [Pg.288]    [Pg.542]    [Pg.408]    [Pg.133]    [Pg.343]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.219 ]




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