A New Look at Physico-Chemical Causes of Changing Climate: Is the Seasonal Variation in Seawater Temperature a Significant Factor in Establishing the Partial Pressure of Carbon Dioxide in the Earth's Atmosphere?

被引:3
作者
Kennedy, Ivan R. [1 ]
Runcie, John W. [2 ]
Zhang, Shuo [3 ]
Ritchie, Raymond J. [4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Sydney, Sydney Inst Agr, Sch Life & Environm Sci, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia
[2] Aquat Pty Ltd, POB 3146, Woy Woy, NSW 2257, Australia
[3] Tsinghua Univ, State Key Lab Hydrosci & Engn, Beijing 100084, Peoples R China
[4] Prince Songkla Univ, Fac Technol & Environm, Phuket Campus, Phuket 83120, Thailand
来源
THERMO | 2022年 / 2卷 / 04期
关键词
CO2; Keeling curve; Mauna Loa; carbonates; ocean pH; chemical potential; acidification; Henry coefficient; Keeling oscillation; calcite; calcification; ALOHA Station; FOSSIL-FUEL CO2; DISSOCIATION-CONSTANTS; OCEAN ACIDIFICATION; CALCIUM-CARBONATE; ACID; PRECIPITATION; SATURATION; ARAGONITE; SALINITY; PCO(2);
D O I
10.3390/thermo2040028
中图分类号
O414.1 [热力学];
学科分类号
摘要
Seasonal oscillations in the partial pressure of carbon dioxide (pCO(2)) in the Earth's atmosphere, stronger in northern latitudes, are assumed to show that terrestrial photosynthesis exceeds respiration in summer, reducing the pCO(2) in air but increasing its value in winter when respiration exceeds photosynthesis. We disagree, proposing that variation in the temperature of the surface mixing zone of seawater also reversibly regulates the pCO(2) in air as a non-equilibrium process between air and seawater. We predict by thermal modelling that carbonate (CO32-) concentration in the surface mixed layer seawater declines in winter by conversion to bicarbonate with CaCO3 (calcite or aragonite) becoming more soluble and, proportional to the fall of temperature, calcite decalcifying more strongly, allowing more CO2 emission to air. Paradoxically, the increasing CO2 concentration in seawater favoring photosynthesis peaking in mid-summer declines simultaneously in autumn and early winter, forced by boundary layer fugacity into phase transfer to the atmosphere, supporting peak atmospheric pCO(2) by late winter. These physico-chemical processes reverse in late winter and spring as seawater warms favoring calcification, fugacity forcing CO2 from the atmosphere as bicarbonate declines and carbonate increases, augmenting suspended calcite particles by several percent. Our numerical computation predicts that the larger range of thermal fluctuations in the northern hemisphere could reversibly favor absorption from air of more than one mole of CO2 per square meter in summer with calcite formation potentially augmenting shallow limestone reefs, despite falling pH, if there is a trend for increasing seawater temperature. Another assumption we challenge is that upwelling and advection from deeper water is the sole cause of increases in dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and alkalinity in surface waters, even in the southern hemisphere. Instead, some calcite dissolution is favored as water temperature falls near the surface. Standard enthalpy analysis of key DIC reactions indicates why this oscillation is more obvious in the northern hemisphere with seasonal variations in water temperature (ca. 7.1 degrees C) being almost twice those in the southern hemisphere (ca. 4.7 degrees C) with a greater depth of the surface mixing zone of seawater in the southern oceans. Questions remain regarding the relative rates of biotic and abiotic inorganic precipitation and dissolution of CaCO3 in the mixing zone. In summary, rapid biogenic calcification is favored by summer photosynthesis, but slower abiotic calcification is also more likely in warmer water. We conclude that the relative significance of terrestrial biotic and seawater abiotic processes in seawater on the seasonal oscillation in the atmosphere can only be assessed by direct seasonal measurements in seawater.
引用
收藏
页码:401 / 434
页数:34
相关论文
共 73 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 1968, Energy flow in biology: biological organization as a problem in thermal physics
[2]   Henry's Law constant for CO2 in aqueous sodium chloride solutions at 1 atm and sub-zero (Celsius) temperatures [J].
Bailey, Neal ;
Papakyriakou, Tim N. ;
Bartels, Carl ;
Wang, Feiyue .
MARINE CHEMISTRY, 2018, 207 :26-32
[3]  
BARKER S., 2012, NATURE ED, V3, P21
[4]   A Detailed View on the Seasonality of Stable Carbon Isotopes Across the North Atlantic [J].
Becker, Meike ;
Steinhoff, Tobias ;
Koertzinger, Arne .
GLOBAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES, 2018, 32 (09) :1406-1419
[6]   EVALUATION OF THE C-13 CONSTRAINT ON THE UPTAKE OF FOSSIL-FUEL CO2 BY THE OCEAN [J].
BROECKER, WS ;
PENG, TH .
GLOBAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES, 1993, 7 (03) :619-626
[7]   Combined constraints on global ocean primary production using observations and models [J].
Buitenhuis, Erik T. ;
Hashioka, Taketo ;
Le Quere, Corinne .
GLOBAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES, 2013, 27 (03) :847-858
[8]  
BURTON EA, 1987, GEOLOGY, V15, P111, DOI 10.1130/0091-7613(1987)15<111:RPROAA>2.0.CO
[9]  
2
[10]   TOTAL CO2 TITRATION ALKALINITY OXYGEN SYSTEM IN THE PACIFIC OCEAN [J].
CHEN, CTA ;
PYTKOWICZ, RM .
NATURE, 1979, 281 (5730) :362-365