Ozone in the Atmosphere
Ozone is very rare in our atmosphere, averaging about three
molecules of ozone for every 10 million air molecules. In spite of
this small amount, ozone plays a vital role in the atmosphere.
Ozone is a form of oxygen
that comprises three atoms (O3) rather than
the two atoms (O2) found in ordinary
molecular oxygen.
Ozone is mainly found in two regions of
the Earth's atmosphere. Most ozone (about 90%) resides in a layer
that begins between 6 and 10 miles (10 and 17 kilometers) above
the Earth's surface and extends up to about 30 miles (50
kilometers). This region of the atmosphere is called the
stratosphere. The ozone in this region is commonly known as the
ozone layer .
Most of the remaining ozone is in the lower region of the atmosphere,
which is called the troposphere. The figure (above) shows
an example of how ozone is distributed in the atmosphere.
The level of maximum concentration is at about 25 km (15
mi) and approximately 10 ppm (parts per million); that is, for every one
million molecules, 10 are ozone molecules.
The ozone molecules in the upper atmosphere (stratosphere) and
the lower atmosphere (troposphere) are chemically identical,
because they all consist of three oxygen atoms and have the
chemical formula O3. However, they have very
different roles in the atmosphere and very different effects on
humans and other living beings. Stratospheric ozone (sometimes
referred to as "good ozone") plays a beneficial role by absorbing
most of the biologically damaging ultraviolet sunlight (called
UV-B), allowing only a small amount to reach the Earth's surface.
The absorption of ultraviolet radiation by ozone creates a source
of heat, which actually forms the stratosphere itself (a region in
which the temperature rises as one goes to higher altitudes).
Ozone thus plays a key role in the temperature structure of the
Earth's atmosphere. Without the filtering action of the ozone
layer, more of the Sun's UV-B radiation would penetrate the
atmosphere and would reach the Earth's surface. Many experimental
studies of plants and animals and clinical studies of humans have
shown the harmful effects of excessive exposure to UV-B
radiation.
Because ozone is toxic to humans and many other animals and plants,
ozone near the ground surface is sometimes referred to as "bad ozone".
Naturally, very little ozone is present near the Earth's surface.
But, due to human activities, harmful concentrations can develop
under certain conditions.
The process that creates ozone near the ground is known as photochemical smog.
It occurs when vehicle exhaust, other industrial chemicals, and abundant
sunlight mix together in a complicated series of chemical reactions.
This can be a very big problem in large cities in the summertime.
Los Angeles, Phoenix, and Washington D.C. are examples of cities
where ozone concentrations sometimes reach dangerously high levels.
The national weather service will issue ozone warnings when ozone
levels become dangerously high near the ground. The rest of this
page concerns only stratospheric ozone loss.
Summary for Stratospheric Ozone Depletion
- We know that certain man-made chemicals, CFCs (and several other molecules),
deplete the amount of ozone
in the stratosphere. The reason is that these ozone-depleting chemicals contain chlorine
and bromine. When
chlorine and bromine atoms are released from these molecules in the stratosphere, they can destroy ozone.
Because many of these molecules are generally unreactive, once released, they remain in
the atmosphere for an average of 100 years. Eventually, they are lifted
from the surface to the stratosphere. Once in the stratosphere, they are
exposed to high levels of ultraviolet radiation. This breaks up the molecule
and releases chlorine and bromine atoms, which then destroy ozone in a subsequent
chemical reaction. Although the amount of chlorine and bromine in the stratophere is
quite low, alarmingly each free chlorine and bromine atom may be capable of destroying up
to 100,000 ozone molecules. A simplified chemical reaction pathway
for how a CFC molecule
relaeses chlorine leading to ozone destruction is shown in figure 1.
- Since 1979, the measured loss of stratospheric ozone has been:
- 10% at high latitudes
- (5-10)% at middle latitudes
- little change for tropics
- Except for the ozone hole described below, ozone is destoyed in
homogeneous chemical reactions (gas phase chemical reactions) between
chlorine (or bromine) radicals and ozone. CFCs provide the chlorine radicals.
Depletion of ozone via homogeneous chemistry is relatively slow.
- Ozone "hole"
- large depletion of stratospheric ozone (up to 70%) that occurs ONLY over
Antarctica from late September through early November (springtime in the
Southern Hemisphere). The meteorological conditions and other factors required for this
rapid destruction of ozone only happen in the Antarctic stratosphere in Southern
Hemisphere spring.
- The Antarctic ozone hole has been observed every
year since 1985. The geographical size and amount of the ozone depletion within
the ozone hole vary from year and depends somewhat on specific atmospheric conditions
in addition to the amount of free chlorine and bromine present.
- It has been proven that CFCs (and similar molecules) are responsible.
- Result of complex chemical reactions that can only happen under the extremely cold
conditions that develop in the Antarctic stratosphere. It is a heterogeneous
chemical reaction because some of the chemical reactions take place on the
surfaces of ice crystals. These ice crystals make up
polar stratospheric clouds, which only form when air temperatures drop below
about -90°F. This chemical pathway leads to very rapid destruction of ozone.
- Once the Antarctic stratosphere warms by December, ozone levels return to near
normal levels.
- Discovery of the ozone hole is what scared the developed world to take action
on the statospheric ozone depletion problem.
- A much smaller and weaker ozone "hole" has been observed over the Arctic region, but
conditions necessary for extreme ozone depletion do not happen in the arctic stratosphere as they
do in the antarctic stratosphere.
- Montreal Protocol (1987) -- Developled countries agreed to phase out use of CFCs
and other ozone-depleting chemicals in World treaty.
Developed countries have almost completely substituted "ozone-friendly" chemicals
for CFCs since mid 1990s; there are still a few ozone-depleting chemicals that are
in the process of being phased out over the next decade or so in accordance with
international agreements.
|
Stratospheric chlorine from various sources. Solid lines based on measurements through 2003,
dashed lines based on future projections. |
- It is expected that the ozone layer will fully recover, but it will take decades due to CFCs already
in the atmosphere and leaking CFCs from old style refrigeration systems. (Keep in mind that the
average lifetime of a CFC molecule in the atmosphere is about 100 years). In fact we are beginning to
see evidence that chlorine levels in the stratosphere are decreasing (see figure above).
|
Size of the Antarctic Ozone hole based on satellite measurements through 2004
. |
- We should expect to continue to observe an Antarctic ozone hole each year for at least decades. The
size of the ozone hole and the amount of ozone destoyed varies quite a bit from year to year
because the atmospheric conditions in the Antarctic winter and early spring are different
from year to year. However, it is expected that the long-term trend will be toward
a smaller ozone hole and less ozone depletion in the Antarctic. The figure above indicates that the
size of the Antarctic ozone hole has stabalized recently. World-wide measurements are showing that
the ozone layer is recovering, although full recovery to pre-industial levles of stratospheric ozone
is not expected until at least the middle of this century. Update: Although it is surprisingly
difficult to find an updated plot of the ozone hole size, measurements since 2004 have shown that
the size of the ozone hole continues to show signs that it is slowly getting smaller, although there
is quite a bit of variability from year to year. In fact 2006 saw the largest ozone hole since the year
2000, while 2009-2010 had the smallest ozone hole for any two year period since 2000.
- Despite all the doom and gloom articles that have been written about ozone depletion, most likely
none of us has been exposed to dangerously high levels of ultraviolet radiation due to ozone depletion.
Your risk of developing uv-related problems (such as skin cancer) depends more on your lifestyle than on the
rather small ozone depletion that has occurred up until now. Update: A 2010 report by the science
advisors to the Montreal Protocal, report that in middle latitudes, surface ultraviolet radiation has been
about constant over the last decade.
- The international agreements do show that the world is capable of dealing
with a global scale environmental threat, resulting from advanced technology. In this
case, the cause of ozone destruction was easily proven and substitutes for CFCs were
easily found without much additional cost. However, it remains to be seen if something
similar will occur with greenhouse gas emissions and global warming, where we do not have
a clear cause and effect mechanism nor a cheap alternative (to burning fossil fuel).
If you are interested, more detailed information about ozone depletion and the Antarctic ozone hole is
provided by
US Environmental Protection Agency Ozone Home Page.