Friday, November 13, 2015

Some chemicals less damaging to ozone can degrade to long-lived greenhouse gas

http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2015-11/agu-scl110315.php

Public Release: 3-Nov-2015
Some chemicals less damaging to ozone can degrade to long-lived greenhouse gas
American Geophysical Union

Some substitutes for ozone-damaging chemicals being phased out worldwide under international agreements are themselves potent greenhouse gases and contribute to warming. Now, a new study published Nov. 2 in Geophysical Research Letters, a publication of the American Geophysical Union, shows for the first time how some of those replacement chemicals can break down in the atmosphere to form a greenhouse gas that can persist for millennia, much longer than the substitute chemicals themselves.

Specifically, when some chemicals widely used as refrigerants break down in the stratosphere -- a layer in the middle atmosphere -- under some conditions, they can form a potent greenhouse gas that lasts for up to 50,000 years, according to scientists from the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES) at the University of Colorado Boulder and the NOAA Earth System Research Laboratory (ESRL) in Boulder.

"This compound, carbon tetrafluoride or CF4, essentially lasts forever because there aren't any known removal mechanisms in the atmosphere," said James Burkholder, a research chemist at NOAA ESRL and lead author of the study.

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