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1.
Science ; 383(6681): 426-432, 2024 Jan 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38271520

RESUMO

Anthropogenic organic carbon emissions reporting has been largely limited to subsets of chemically speciated volatile organic compounds. However, new aircraft-based measurements revealed total gas-phase organic carbon emissions that exceed oil sands industry-reported values by 1900% to over 6300%, the bulk of which was due to unaccounted-for intermediate-volatility and semivolatile organic compounds. Measured facility-wide emissions represented approximately 1% of extracted petroleum, resulting in total organic carbon emissions equivalent to that from all other sources across Canada combined. These real-world observations demonstrate total organic carbon measurements as a means of detecting unknown or underreported carbon emissions regardless of chemical features. Because reporting gaps may include hazardous, reactive, or secondary air pollutants, fully constraining the impact of anthropogenic emissions necessitates routine, comprehensive total organic carbon monitoring as an inherent check on mass closure.

2.
Environ Sci Technol ; 57(43): 16446-16455, 2023 10 31.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37856830

RESUMO

Energy-efficient residential building standards require the use of mechanical ventilation systems that replace indoor air with outdoor air. Transient outdoor pollution events can be transported indoors via the mechanical ventilation system and other outdoor air entry pathways and impact indoor air chemistry. In the spring of 2022, we observed elevated levels of NOx (NO + NO2) that originated outdoors, entering the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Net-Zero Energy Residential Test Facility through the mechanical ventilation system. Using measurements of NOx, ozone (O3), and volatile organic compounds (VOCs), we modeled the effect of the outdoor-to-indoor ventilation of NOx pollution on the production of nitrate radical (NO3), a potentially important indoor oxidant. We evaluated how VOC oxidation chemistry was affected by NO3 during NOx pollution events compared to background conditions. We found that nitric oxide (NO) pollution introduced indoors titrated O3 and inhibited the modeled production of NO3. NO ventilated indoors also likely ceased most gas-phase VOC oxidation chemistry during plume events. Only through the artificial introduction of O3 to the ventilation duct during a NOx pollution event (i.e., when O3 and NO2 concentrations were high relative to typical conditions) were we able to measure NO3-initiated VOC oxidation products, indicating that NO3 was impacting VOC oxidation chemistry.


Assuntos
Poluentes Atmosféricos , Poluição do Ar em Ambientes Fechados , Ozônio , Compostos Orgânicos Voláteis , Óxido Nítrico , Compostos Orgânicos Voláteis/análise , Poluentes Atmosféricos/análise , Poluição do Ar em Ambientes Fechados/análise , Dióxido de Nitrogênio/análise , Ozônio/análise , Monitoramento Ambiental
3.
Environ Sci Technol ; 57(38): 14150-14161, 2023 09 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37699525

RESUMO

Exposure to ambient fine particulate matter (PM2.5) is associated with millions of premature deaths annually. Oxidative stress through overproduction of reactive oxygen species (ROS) is a possible mechanism for PM2.5-induced health effects. Organic aerosol (OA) is a dominant component of PM2.5 worldwide, yet its role in PM2.5 toxicity is poorly understood due to its chemical complexity. Here, through integrated cellular ROS measurements and detailed multi-instrument chemical characterization of PM in urban southeastern United States, we show that oxygenated OA (OOA), especially more-oxidized OOA, is the main OA type associated with cellular ROS production. We further reveal that highly unsaturated species containing carbon-oxygen double bonds and aromatic rings in OOA are major contributors to cellular ROS production. These results highlight the key chemical features of ambient OA driving its toxicity. As more-oxidized OOA is ubiquitous and abundant in the atmosphere, this emphasizes the need to understand its sources and chemical processing when formulating effective strategies to mitigate PM2.5 health impacts.


Assuntos
Estresse Oxidativo , Oxigênio , Espécies Reativas de Oxigênio , Aerossóis , Sudeste dos Estados Unidos
4.
Environ Sci Technol ; 57(41): 15546-15557, 2023 10 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37647222

RESUMO

Unsaturated triglycerides found in food and skin oils are reactive in ambient air. However, the chemical fate of such compounds has not been well characterized in genuine indoor environments. Here, we monitored the aging of oil coatings on glass surfaces over a range of environmental conditions, using mass spectrometry, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) techniques. Upon room air exposure (up to 17 ppb ozone), the characteristic ozonolysis products, secondary ozonides, were observed on surfaces near the cooking area of a commercial kitchen, along with condensed-phase aldehydes. In an office setting, ozonolysis is also the dominant degradation pathway for oil films exposed to air. However, for indoor enclosed spaces such as drawers, the depleted air flow makes lipid autoxidation more favorable after an induction period of a few days. Forming hydroperoxides as the major primary products, this radical-mediated peroxidation behavior is accelerated by indoor direct sunlight, but the initiation step in dark settings is still unclear. These results are in accord with radical measurements, indicating that indoor photooxidation facilitates radical formation on surfaces. Overall, many intermediate and end products observed are reactive oxygen species (ROS) that may induce oxidative stress in human bodies. Given that these species can be widely found on both food and household surfaces, their toxicological properties are worth further attention.


Assuntos
Poluentes Atmosféricos , Poluição do Ar em Ambientes Fechados , Ozônio , Humanos , Ozônio/análise , Espectrometria de Massas , Óleos , Poluição do Ar em Ambientes Fechados/análise , Poluentes Atmosféricos/análise
5.
Environ Sci Process Impacts ; 25(5): 964-979, 2023 May 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37102581

RESUMO

Gas and particulate emissions from commercial kitchens are important contributors to urban air quality. Not only are these emissions important for occupational exposure of kitchen staff, but they can also be vented to outdoors, causing uncertain health and environmental impacts. In this study, we chemically speciated volatile organic compounds and measured particulate matter mass concentrations in a well-ventilated commercial kitchen for two weeks, including during typical cooking and cleaning operations. From cooking, we observed a complex mixture of volatile organic gases dominated by oxygenated compounds commonly associated with the thermal degradation of cooking oils. Gas-phase chemicals existed at concentrations 2-7 orders of magnitude lower than their exposure limits, due to the high ventilation in the room (mean air change rate of 28 h-1 during operating hours). During evening kitchen cleaning, we observed an increase in the signal of chlorinated gases from 1.1-9.0 times their values during daytime cooking. Particulate matter mass loadings tripled at these times. While exposure to cooking emissions in this indoor environment was reduced effectively by the high ventilation rate, exposure to particulate matter and chlorinated gases was elevated during evening cleaning periods. This emphasizes the need for careful consideration of ventilation rates and methods in commercial kitchen environments during all hours of kitchen operation.


Assuntos
Poluentes Atmosféricos , Poluição do Ar em Ambientes Fechados , Poluição do Ar , Humanos , Poluição do Ar em Ambientes Fechados/análise , Monitoramento Ambiental/métodos , Material Particulado/análise , Gases , Culinária , Poluentes Atmosféricos/análise
6.
Environ Sci Process Impacts ; 25(2): 165-175, 2023 Feb 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35194622

RESUMO

Cooking emissions account for a major fraction of urban volatile organic compounds and organic aerosol. Aldehyde species, in particular, are important exposure hazards in indoor residential and occupational environments, and precursors to particulate matter and ozone formation in outdoor air. Formation pathways of aldehydes from oils that lead to their emissions are not well understood. In this work, we investigate the underlying mechanisms involved in the formation of aldehydes from heated cooking oil emissions, through studying how antioxidants and oil composition modulate oxidation chemistry. Our results demonstrate that gaseous emissions are driven by radical-mediated autoxidation reactions in cooking oil, and the composition of cooking oils strongly influences the reaction mechanisms. Antioxidants have a dual effect on aldehyde emissions depending on the rates of radical propagation reactions. We propose a mechanistic framework that can be used to understand and predict cooking emissions under different cooking conditions. Our results highlight the need to understand the rates and mechanisms of autoxidation and other reactions in cooking oils in order to accurately predict the gas- and particle-phase emissions from food cooking in urban atmospheres.


Assuntos
Poluentes Atmosféricos , Poluição do Ar em Ambientes Fechados , Poluentes Atmosféricos/análise , Aldeídos/análise , Óleos , Material Particulado , Culinária/métodos , Poluição do Ar em Ambientes Fechados/análise , Monitoramento Ambiental/métodos
7.
Environ Sci Technol ; 56(12): 7741-7750, 2022 06 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35671398

RESUMO

The high-temperature cooking of protein-rich foods represents an important but poorly constrained source of nitrogen-containing gases and particles to indoor and outdoor atmospheres. For example, panfrying meat may form and emit these nitrogen-containing compounds through complex chemistry occurring between heated proteins and cooking oils. Here, we simulate this cooking process by heating amino acids together with triglycerides. We explore their interactions across different temperatures, triglyceride types, and amino acid precursors to form amide-containing products. Ammonia, arising from the thermal degradation of amino acids, may react with a triglyceride's ester linkages, forming amides and promoting de-esterification reactions that break the triglyceride into volatilizable products. Additionally, triglycerides may thermally oxidize and fragment as they are heated, and the resulting oxygenated breakdown products may react with ammonia to form amides. We observed evidence for amide formation through both of these pathways, including gas-phase emissions of C2-11H5-23NO species, whose emission factors ranged from 33 to 813 µg total gas-phase amides per gram of amino acid precursor. Comparable quantities of particle-phase oleamide (C18H35NO) were emitted, ranging from 45 to 218 µg/g. The observed amide products had variable predicted toxicities, highlighting the importance of understanding their emissions from cooking and their ultimate inhalation exposure risks.


Assuntos
Poluentes Atmosféricos , Poluição do Ar em Ambientes Fechados , Poluição do Ar , Poluentes Atmosféricos/análise , Poluição do Ar em Ambientes Fechados/análise , Amidas , Aminoácidos , Amônia , Culinária , Monitoramento Ambiental/métodos , Gases , Nitrogênio , Material Particulado/análise , Triglicerídeos
8.
Sci Adv ; 6(10): eaay4109, 2020 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32181345

RESUMO

The contamination of indoor nonsmoking environments with thirdhand smoke (THS) is an important, poorly understood public health concern. Real-time THS off-gassing from smokers into a nonsmoking movie theater was observed with online and offline high-resolution mass spectrometry. Prominent emission events of THS tracers (e.g., 2,5-dimethylfuran, 2-methylfuran, and acetonitrile) and other tobacco-related volatile organic compounds (VOCs) coincided with the arrival of certain moviegoers and left residual contamination. These VOC emission events exposed occupants to the equivalent of 1 to 10 cigarettes of secondhand smoke, including multiple hazardous air pollutants (e.g., benzene and formaldehyde) at parts-per-billion concentrations. Nicotine and related intermediate-volatility nitrogen-containing compounds, which vaporized from clothes/bodies and recondensed onto aerosol, comprised 34% of observed functionalized organic aerosol abundance. Exposure to THS VOC emission events will be considerably enhanced in poorly ventilated or smaller spaces in contrast with a large, well-ventilated theater-amplifying concentrations and potential impacts on health and indoor chemistry.


Assuntos
Poluição do Ar em Ambientes Fechados/análise , Benzeno/análise , Furanos/análise , Nicotina/análise , Poluição por Fumaça de Tabaco/análise , Compostos Orgânicos Voláteis/análise , Acetonitrilas/análise , Acetonitrilas/química , Aerossóis , Benzeno/química , Formaldeído/análise , Formaldeído/química , Furanos/química , Alemanha , Humanos , Espectrometria de Massas , Filmes Cinematográficos , Nicotina/química , Compostos Orgânicos Voláteis/classificação
9.
Environ Sci Technol ; 53(22): 13009-13018, 2019 Nov 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31525033

RESUMO

The molecular-level composition and structure of organic aerosol (OA) affect its chemical/physical properties, transformations, and impacts. Here, we use the molecular-level chemical composition of functionalized OA from three diverse field sites to evaluate the effect of molecular-level compositional variability on OA phase state and thermodynamic mixing favorability. For these ambient sites, modeled aerosol phase state ranges from liquid to semisolid. The observed variability in OA composition has some effect on resulting phase state, but other factors like the presence of inorganic ions, aerosol liquid water, and internal versus external mixing with water are determining factors in whether these particles exist as liquids, semisolids, or solids. Organic molecular composition plays a more important role in determining phase state for phase-separated (verus well-mixed) systems. Similarly, despite the observed OA compositional differences, the thermodynamic mixing favorability for OA samples with aerosol liquid water, isoprene oxidation products, or monoterpene oxidation products remains fairly consistent within each campaign. Mixing of filter-sampled OA and isoprene or monoterpene oxidation products is often favorable in both seasons, while mixing with water is generally unfavorable.


Assuntos
Água , Aerossóis , Oxirredução , Estações do Ano , Termodinâmica
10.
J Chromatogr A ; 1598: 163-174, 2019 Aug 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30928166

RESUMO

Complex airborne mixtures of organic compounds can contain 10,000's of diverse compounds at trace concentrations. Here, we incorporate high-resolution mass spectrometry into our integrated offline sampling-to-analysis measurement system for routine molecular-level speciation of complex mixtures in gas- or particle-phase samples with detection limits of 2-20 pg L-1 (i.e. 0.2-1.9 ppt in 6 L samples). Analytes desorbed from custom adsorbent tubes (or filter extracts) were separated via gas chromatography (GC) and simultaneously analyzed by an electron ionization quadrupole mass spectrometer (EI-MS), and by atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI) combined with a high-resolution quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometer (Q-TOF) with a resolution of 25,000-40,000 M/ΔM in HR-TOF and MS/MS modes. We demonstrated our system with simple standards, a Macondo crude oil standard as a reference for complex mixtures of common airborne compounds, and ambient samples using GC-TOF and GC-MS/MS. We speciated complex mixtures at mass accuracy error (i.e. mass tolerance) down to 8 ± 2 ppm (e.g. resolving analytes of mass 270.000 u with 0.003 u accuracy) using a targeted approach with 3000 molecular formulas, including hydrocarbons and functionalized analytes containing oxygen, sulfur, nitrogen, or phosphorous. This extended from compounds with 10 to 32 carbon atoms and up to 16 hydrocarbon formulas per carbon number, and a similar range for functionalized compound classes. We also demonstrated our MS/MS capabilities to differentiate structural isomers and determine the presence of specific functional groups; and our direct-TOF capability, which bypasses high-temperature chromatographic separation to preserve functionalized analytes.


Assuntos
Misturas Complexas/química , Gases/química , Compostos Orgânicos/análise , Espectrometria de Massas em Tandem , Ionização do Ar , Pressão Atmosférica , Cromatografia Gasosa-Espectrometria de Massas , Limite de Detecção
11.
Environ Sci Technol ; 53(9): 4977-4987, 2019 05 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31002496

RESUMO

Aerosol phase state is critical for quantifying aerosol effects on climate and air quality. However, significant challenges remain in our ability to predict and quantify phase state during its evolution in the atmosphere. Herein, we demonstrate that aerosol phase (liquid, semisolid, solid) exhibits a diel cycle in a mixed forest environment, oscillating between a viscous, semisolid phase state at night and liquid phase state with phase separation during the day. The viscous nighttime particles existed despite higher relative humidity and were independently confirmed by bounce factor measurements and atomic force microscopy. High-resolution mass spectrometry shows the more viscous phase state at night is impacted by the formation of terpene-derived and higher molecular weight secondary organic aerosol (SOA) and smaller inorganic sulfate mass fractions. Larger daytime particulate sulfate mass fractions, as well as a predominance of lower molecular weight isoprene-derived SOA, lead to the liquid state of the daytime particles and phase separation after greater uptake of liquid water, despite the lower daytime relative humidity. The observed diel cycle of aerosol phase should provoke rethinking of the SOA atmospheric lifecycle, as it suggests diurnal variability in gas-particle partitioning and mixing time scales, which influence aerosol multiphase chemistry, lifetime, and climate impacts.


Assuntos
Atmosfera , Sulfatos , Aerossóis , Química Orgânica , Florestas
12.
J Chromatogr A ; 1575: 80-90, 2018 Nov 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30292521

RESUMO

Gas-phase organic compounds across a range of volatilities, including volatile organic compounds (VOCs), are key components of outdoor air, indoor spaces, and a variety of other anthropogenic and biogenic systems. The collection of offline samples on adsorbent-packed tubes for analysis on laboratory instrumentation has been in use for decades, but with limited sensitivities and compound coverage. We present and evaluate our integrated sampling-to-analysis system that enables offline detailed chemical characterization of multi-faceted organic mixtures at trace concentrations. Its capabilities extend across a diverse variety of VOCs with different molecular features, as well as intermediate and semivolatile organic compounds (I/SVOCs). Samples can be collected manually or via automated devices that have been applied in chamber, field, and aircraft platforms. The laboratory instrumentation can be coupled to both a high resolution mass spectrometer (MS) and a traditional quadrupole MS, though performance metrics presented in this study are determined via the traditional MS. We demonstrate capabilities for detailed chemical characterization and routine performance for a wide range of compound functionalities at sub-part per trillion (ppt) concentrations, and as low as <100 parts per quadrillion (ppq), yielding 3300 observed unique compound peaks in a single indoor air sample. These limits of detection and compound coverage were accomplished through a holistic optimization of the entire system and lifecycle of adsorbent tubes. We present our best practices for all aspects of tube production, handling, sampling, and analysis, and an examination of commercially-available materials and our custom adsorbent tubes using a diverse mix of VOC, IVOC, and SVOC standards, including difficult to measure analytes across a range of polarities and functionalities. In many aspects, the commercially-available materials and tube conditioners tested were insufficient for achieving low-ppt measurements.


Assuntos
Monitoramento Ambiental/métodos , Poluentes Ambientais/análise , Compostos Orgânicos Voláteis/análise , Monitoramento Ambiental/instrumentação
13.
J Chem Thermodyn ; 90: 79-86, 2015 Nov 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26973354

RESUMO

Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) are common components of many materials, such as petroleum and various types of tars. They are generally present in mixtures, occurring both naturally and as byproducts of fuel processing operations. It is important to understand the thermodynamic properties of such mixtures in order to understand better and predict their behavior (i.e., fate and transport) in the environment and in industrial operations. To characterize better the thermodynamic behavior of PAH mixtures, the phase behavior of a binary (anthracene + phenanthrene) system was studied by differential scanning calorimetry, X-ray diffraction, and the Knudsen effusion technique. Mixtures of (anthracene + phenanthrene) exhibit non-ideal mixture behavior. They form a lower-melting, phenanthrene-rich phase with an initial melting temperature of 372 K (identical to the melting temperature of pure phenanthrene) and a vapor pressure of roughly lnP/Pa = -2.38. The phenanthrene-rich phase coexists with an anthracene-rich phase when the mole fraction of phenanthrene (xP) in the mixture is less than or equal to 0.80. Mixtures initially at xP = 0.90 consist entirely of the phenanthrene-rich phase and sublime at nearly constant vapor pressure and composition, consistent with azeotrope-like behavior. Quasi-azeotropy was also observed for very high-content anthracene mixtures (2.5 < xP < 5) indicating that anthracene may accommodate very low levels of phenanthrene in its crystal structure.

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