London, Oct 25 ANI: The rise in demand of
electronic products like plasma TV's is resulting in a boost in atmospheric levels of a potent greenhouse
gas known as nitrogen trifluoride NF3.According to a
report in
Nature News, nitrogen trifluoride is an extremely potent greenhouse
gas used in the
electronics industry, which is at least four times more abundant in the atmosphere than previously
thought.Scientists recommend that to better control its use, NF3 should be added to the
list of
gases regulated under future
climate-change agreements.NF3 is 12,000-20,000 times more efficient at trapping heat than carbon dioxide, the best-known of six
greenhouse gases regulated by the 1997 Kyoto protocol on
climate change.In the past ten years, NF3 has become an environmentally preferable alternative to more volatile perfluorocarbons. It is now commonly used by
manufacturers of plasma
TVs and other
flat-panel
displays as a source of reactive fluorine atoms, used to etch the silicon
chips in the devices.Because only very small amounts of the
gas were
thought to escape to the atmosphere in these processes - about 2 percent of
all NF3 produced - it was long assumed that its contribution to
man-made
global warming was negligible. This notion was first challenged earlier this year when Michael Prather, an atmospheric chemist at the
University of California in Irvine, questioned the commonly assumed emission rates of the
gas. Now, analyses of air samples taken at two coastal clean-air stations in California and Tasmania,
Australia, have for the first time confirmed that a significantly higher percentage of overall NF3 production escapes to the atmosphere. The team, led by Ray Weiss of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, California, used a combined
gas-chromatography and mass-spectrometry system to measure NF3 levels in their samples.They found that over the past three decades, the atmospheric concentration of the
gas has increased more than 20-fold, from 0.02 to 0.454 parts per trillion, with most emissions occurring in the Northern Hemisphere. The overall amount of the
gas in the atmosphere, estimated in 2006 at less than 1,200 tonnes, was then actually 4,200 tonnes and has since risen to 5,400 tonnes.Given its strong global-warming potential and estimated atmospheric lifetime of 740 years, this is equivalent to the effect of about 67 million tonnes of carbon dioxide - roughly the total annual CO2 emissions of
Finland. "It is now shown to be an important greenhouse
gas," said Prather. "Now we need to get hard
numbers on how much is flowing through the system, from production to
disposal," he added. ANI