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1.
Faraday Discuss ; 238(0): 589-618, 2022 Oct 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35775604

RESUMO

The acetylperoxy + HO2 reaction has multiple impacts on the troposphere, with a triplet pathway leading to peracetic acid + O2 (reaction (1a)) competing with singlet pathways leading to acetic acid + O3 (reaction (1b)) and acetoxy + OH + O2 (reaction (1c)). A recent experimental study has reported branching fractions for these three pathways (α1a, α1b, and α1c) from 229 K to 294 K. We constructed a theoretical model for predicting α1a, α1b, and α1c using quantum chemical and Rice-Ramsperger-Kassel-Marcus/master equation (RRKM/ME) simulations. Our main quantum chemical method was Weizmann-1 Brueckner Doubles (W1BD) theory; we combined W1BD and equation-of-motion spin-flip coupled cluster (SF) theory to treat open-shell singlet structures. Using RRKM/ME simulations that included all conformers of acetylperoxy-HO2 pre-reactive complexes led to a 298 K triplet rate constant, k1a = 5.11 × 10-12 cm3 per molecule per s, and values of α1a in excellent agreement with experiment. Increasing the energies of all singlet structures by 0.9 kcal mol-1 led to a combined singlet rate constant, k1b+1c = 1.20 × 10-11 cm3 per molecule per s, in good agreement with experiment. However, our predicted variations in α1b and α1c with temperature are not nearly as large as those measured, perhaps due to the inadequacy of SF theory in treating the transition structures controlling acetic acid + O3 formation vs. acetoxy + OH + O2 formation.

2.
J Phys Chem A ; 126(42): 7719-7736, 2022 Oct 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36251783

RESUMO

The oxidation of volatile organic compounds (VOCs), which are emitted to the atmosphere from natural and anthropogenic sources, leads to the formation of ozone and secondary organic aerosol (SOA) particles that impact air quality and climate. In the study reported here, we investigated the products of the reactions of five biogenic monoterpenes with OH radicals (an important daytime oxidant) under conditions that mimic the chemistry that occurs in polluted air, and developed mechanisms to explain their formation. Experiments were conducted in an environmental chamber, and information on the identity of gas-phase molecular products was obtained using online mass spectrometry, while liquid chromatography and two methods of functional group analysis were used to characterize the SOA composition. The gas-phase products of the reactions were similar to those formed in our previous studies of the reactions of these monoterpenes with NO3 radicals (an important nighttime oxidant), in that they all contained various combinations of nitrate, carbonyl, hydroxyl, ester, and ether groups. But in spite of this, less SOA was formed in OH/NOx reactions and it was composed of monomers, while SOA formed in NO3 radical reactions consisted of acetal and hemiacetal oligomers formed by particle-phase accretion reactions. In addition, it appeared that some monomers underwent particle-phase hydrolysis, whereas oligomers did not. These differences are due primarily to the arrangement of hydroxyl, carbonyl, nitrate, and ether groups in the monomers, which can in turn be explained by differences in OH and NO3 radical reaction mechanisms. The results provide insight into the impact of VOC structure on the amount and composition of SOA formed by atmospheric oxidation, which influence important aerosol properties such as volatility and hygroscopicity.


Assuntos
Poluentes Atmosféricos , Ozônio , Compostos Orgânicos Voláteis , Monoterpenos/química , Compostos Orgânicos Voláteis/química , Nitratos/química , Acetais , Aerossóis/química , Ozônio/química , Radical Hidroxila/química , Oxidantes , Ésteres , Poluentes Atmosféricos/química
3.
J Phys Chem A ; 126(40): 7309-7330, 2022 Oct 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36170568

RESUMO

Dark chamber experiments were conducted to study the SOA formed from the oxidation of α-pinene and Δ-carene under different peroxy radical (RO2) fate regimes: RO2 + NO3, RO2 + RO2, and RO2 + HO2. SOA mass yields from α-pinene oxidation were <1 to ∼25% and strongly dependent on available OA mass up to ∼100 µg m-3. The strong yield dependence of α-pinene oxidation is driven by absorptive partitioning to OA and not by available surface area for condensation. Yields from Δ-carene + NO3 were consistently higher, ranging from ∼10-50% with some dependence on OA for <25 µg m-3. Explicit kinetic modeling including vapor wall losses was conducted to enable comparisons across VOC precursors and RO2 fate regimes and to determine atmospherically relevant yields. Furthermore, SOA yields were similar for each monoterpene across the nominal RO2 + NO3, RO2 + RO2, or RO2 + HO2 regimes; thus, the volatility basis sets (VBS) constructed were independent of the chemical regime. Elemental O/C ratios of ∼0.4-0.6 and nitrate/organic mass ratios of ∼0.15 were observed in the particle phase for both monoterpenes in all regimes, using aerosol mass spectrometer (AMS) measurements. An empirical relationship for estimating particle density using AMS-derived elemental ratios, previously reported in the literature for non-nitrate containing OA, was successfully adapted to organic nitrate-rich SOA. Observations from an NO3- chemical ionization mass spectrometer (NO3-CIMS) suggest that Δ-carene more readily forms low-volatility gas-phase highly oxygenated molecules (HOMs) than α-pinene, which primarily forms volatile and semivolatile species, when reacted with NO3, regardless of RO2 regime. The similar Δ-carene SOA yields across regimes, high O/C ratios, and presence of HOMs, suggest that unimolecular and multistep processes such as alkoxy radical isomerization and decomposition may play a role in the formation of SOA from Δ-carene + NO3. The scarcity of peroxide functional groups (on average, 14% of C10 groups carried a peroxide functional group in one test experiment in the RO2 + RO2 regime) appears to rule out a major role for autoxidation and organic peroxide (ROOH, ROOR) formation. The consistently substantially lower SOA yields observed for α-pinene + NO3 suggest such pathways are less available for this precursor. The marked and robust regime-independent difference in SOA yield from two different precursor monoterpenes suggests that in order to accurately model SOA production in forested regions the chemical mechanism must feature some distinction among different monoterpenes.

4.
J Phys Chem A ; 125(47): 10207-10222, 2021 Dec 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34791878

RESUMO

Monoterpenes are a major component of the large quantities of biogenic volatile organic compounds that are emitted to the atmosphere each year. They have a variety of structures, which influences their subsequent reactions with OH radicals, O3, or NO3 radicals and the tendency for these reactions to form secondary organic aerosol (SOA). Here we report the results of an environmental chamber study of the reaction of Δ-3-carene, an abundant unsaturated C10 bicyclic monoterpene, with NO3 radicals, a major nighttime oxidant. Gas- and particle-phase reaction products were analyzed in real time and offline by using mass spectrometry, gas and liquid chromatography, infrared spectroscopy, and derivatization-spectrophotometric methods. The results were used to identify and quantify functional groups and molecular products and to develop gas- and particle-phase reaction mechanisms to explain their formation. Identified gas-phase products were all first-generation ring-retaining and ring-opened compounds (ten C10 and one C9 monomers) with 2-4 functional groups and one C20 dinitrooxydialkyl peroxide dimer. Upon partitioning to the particle phase, the monomers reacted further to form oligomers consisting almost entirely of C20 acetal and hemiacetal dimers, with those formed from a hydroxynitrate and hydroxycarbonyl nitrate comprising more than 50% of the SOA mass. The SOA contained an average of 0.94, 0.71, 0.15, 0.11, 0.16, 0.13, and 7.80 nitrate, carbonyl, hydroxyl, carboxyl, ester, peroxide, and methylene groups per C10 monomer and was formed with a mass yield of 56%. These results have important similarities and differences to those obtained from a previous similar study of the reaction of ß-pinene and yield new insights into the effects of monoterpene structure on gas- and particle-phase reactions that can lead to the formation of a large variety of multifunctional products and significant amounts of SOA.

5.
ACS Earth Space Chem ; 7(6): 1235-1246, 2023 Jun 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37342759

RESUMO

Atmospheric simulation chambers continue to be indispensable tools for research in the atmospheric sciences. Insights from chamber studies are integrated into atmospheric chemical transport models, which are used for science-informed policy decisions. However, a centralized data management and access infrastructure for their scientific products had not been available in the United States and many parts of the world. ICARUS (Integrated Chamber Atmospheric data Repository for Unified Science) is an open access, searchable, web-based infrastructure for storing, sharing, discovering, and utilizing atmospheric chamber data [https://icarus.ucdavis.edu]. ICARUS has two parts: a data intake portal and a search and discovery portal. Data in ICARUS are curated, uniform, interactive, indexed on popular search engines, mirrored by other repositories, version-tracked, vocabulary-controlled, and citable. ICARUS hosts both legacy data and new data in compliance with open access data mandates. Targeted data discovery is available based on key experimental parameters, including organic reactants and mixtures that are managed using the PubChem chemical database, oxidant information, nitrogen oxide (NOx) content, alkylperoxy radical (RO2) fate, seed particle information, environmental conditions, and reaction categories. A discipline-specific repository such as ICARUS with high amounts of metadata works to support the evaluation and revision of atmospheric model mechanisms, intercomparison of data and models, and the development of new model frameworks that can have more predictive power in the current and future atmosphere. The open accessibility and interactive nature of ICARUS data may also be useful for teaching, data mining, and training machine learning models.

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