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Spatially separate production of hydrogen oxides and nitric oxide in lightning
by
Jenkins, Jena M.
, Brune, William H.
in
Air pollution
/ Atmosphere
/ Chemistry
/ Copper
/ Electric sparks
/ Hydrogen
/ Hydrogen production
/ Hydroxyl radicals
/ Hypothesis testing
/ Laboratories
/ Laboratory experimentation
/ Laboratory experiments
/ Lightning
/ Lightning flashes
/ Nitric oxide
/ Oxidation
/ Oxidizing agents
/ Pollutants
/ Ultraviolet radiation
2025
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Spatially separate production of hydrogen oxides and nitric oxide in lightning
by
Jenkins, Jena M.
, Brune, William H.
in
Air pollution
/ Atmosphere
/ Chemistry
/ Copper
/ Electric sparks
/ Hydrogen
/ Hydrogen production
/ Hydroxyl radicals
/ Hypothesis testing
/ Laboratories
/ Laboratory experimentation
/ Laboratory experiments
/ Lightning
/ Lightning flashes
/ Nitric oxide
/ Oxidation
/ Oxidizing agents
/ Pollutants
/ Ultraviolet radiation
2025
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Do you wish to request the book?
Spatially separate production of hydrogen oxides and nitric oxide in lightning
by
Jenkins, Jena M.
, Brune, William H.
in
Air pollution
/ Atmosphere
/ Chemistry
/ Copper
/ Electric sparks
/ Hydrogen
/ Hydrogen production
/ Hydroxyl radicals
/ Hypothesis testing
/ Laboratories
/ Laboratory experimentation
/ Laboratory experiments
/ Lightning
/ Lightning flashes
/ Nitric oxide
/ Oxidation
/ Oxidizing agents
/ Pollutants
/ Ultraviolet radiation
2025
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Spatially separate production of hydrogen oxides and nitric oxide in lightning
Journal Article
Spatially separate production of hydrogen oxides and nitric oxide in lightning
2025
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Overview
The atmosphere's most important oxidizer, the hydroxyl radical (OH), is generated in abundance by lightning, but the contribution of this electrically generated OH (LOH) to global OH oxidation needs to be better quantified. Part of the uncertainty in this contribution is due to the abundant nitric oxide (NO) also generated in lightning, which rapidly removes the LOH before it can oxidize other pollutants in the atmosphere. However, atmospheric observations and a previous laboratory study show extreme LOH coexists with extreme NO. The only way this electrically generated HOx (LHOx) can possibly survive is if LOH production is spatially separated from the NO production in lightning flashes and laboratory sparks. This hypothesis of spatially separate OH and NO production is further tested here in a series of laboratory experiments, where the OH decays were measured from spark discharges in air which had increasing amounts of NO added to it. The LOH decayed faster as more NO was added to the air, indicating that the LOH was reacting with the added NO and not the spark NO. Thus, LOH from lightning flashes is not immediately consumed by the electrically generated NO but is available to oxidize other pollutants in the atmosphere and contribute to global OH oxidation. Subsequent modeling of the laboratory data also supports the spatially separate production of LOH and NO and further suggests that substantial HONO may also be produced by sparks and lightning in the atmosphere.
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