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Although significant progress has been made in understanding the sources and chemistry of indoor volatile organic compounds (VOCs) during the past decades, much is unknown about the role of humans in indoor air chemistry. In the spring of 2014, we conducted continuous measurements of VOCs using a proton transfer reaction mass spectrometer (PTR-MS) in a university classroom. Positive matrix factorization (PMF) of the measured VOCs revealed a 'human influence' component, which likely represented VOCs produced from human breath and ozonolysis of human skin lipids. The concentration of the human influence component increased with the number of occupants and decreased with ventilation rate in a similar way to CO2 , with an average contribution of 40% to the measured daytime VOC concentration. In addition, the human skin lipid ozonolysis products were observed to correlate with CO2 and anticorrelate with O3 , suggesting that reactions on human surfaces may be important sources of indoor VOCs and sinks for indoor O3 . Our study suggests that humans can substantially affect VOC composition and oxidative capacity in indoor environments.
Assuntos
Poluição do Ar em Ambientes Fechados/análise , Monitoramento Ambiental/métodos , Universidades , Compostos Orgânicos Voláteis/análise , HumanosRESUMO
Fe/CoO heterostructures were realized by depositing Fe thin films on CoO nanoparticle arrays. Magnetization measurements revealed that 1 nm Fe exhibits a superparamagnetic behavior at 300 K and a super spin-glass state at temperatures below 80 K. The superparamagnetic as well as super spin-glass state vanishes for higher Fe film thicknesses once Fe starts to form a continuous layer across the CoO nanoparticle arrays. Furthermore, all samples exhibit an exchange bias effect at 6 K after field cooling, with a maximum exchange bias field of about 60 Oe for a Fe thickness of 2 nm. M-H loops of thicker Fe samples show a two-step magnetization reversal where Fe in the area in between CoO nanoparticles reverses at low fields, while, in proximity to the CoO nanoparticles, Fe switches at substantially higher fields. Both reversals are exchange biased.
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Organonitrates (ON) are important products of gas-phase oxidation of volatile organic compounds in the troposphere; some models predict, and laboratory studies show, the formation of large, multifunctional ON with vapor pressures low enough to partition to the particle phase. Organosulfates (OS) have also been recently detected in secondary organic aerosol. Despite their potential importance, ON and OS remain a nearly unexplored aspect of atmospheric chemistry because few studies have quantified particulate ON or OS in ambient air. We report the response of a high-resolution time-of-flight aerosol mass spectrometer (AMS) to aerosol ON and OS standards and mixtures. We quantify the potentially substantial underestimation of organic aerosol O/C, commonly used as a metric for aging, and N/C. Most of the ON-nitrogen appears as NO(x)+ ions in the AMS, which are typically dominated by inorganic nitrate. Minor organonitrogen ions are observed although their identity and intensity vary between standards. We evaluate the potential for using NO(x)+ fragment ratios, organonitrogen ions, HNO(3)+ ions, the ammonium balance of the nominally inorganic ions, and comparison to ion-chromatography instruments to constrain the concentrations of ON for ambient datasets, and apply these techniques to a field study in Riverside, CA. OS manifests as separate organic and sulfate components in the AMS with minimal organosulfur fragments and little difference in fragmentation from inorganic sulfate. The low thermal stability of ON and OS likely causes similar detection difficulties for other aerosol mass spectrometers using vaporization and/or ionization techniques with similar or larger energy, which has likely led to an underappreciation of these species.
Assuntos
Aerossóis , Química Orgânica/instrumentação , Química Orgânica/métodos , Química/métodos , Espectrometria de Massas/instrumentação , Espectrometria de Massas/métodos , Nitratos/química , Sulfatos/química , Poluentes Atmosféricos/análise , Poluentes Atmosféricos/química , Amônia/química , Cromatografia por Troca Iônica/métodos , Íons , Nitrogênio/química , Ácido Oleico/química , Tamanho da Partícula , Material Particulado/química , Fatores de TempoRESUMO
The adsorption of 4-mercaptopyridine (4MPy) molecules on reconstructed Au(111) is investigated by Scanning Tunneling Microscopy (STM) and Spectroscopy (STS) at low temperature and under ultra-high vacuum (UHV) conditions. As made visible by STM, at low coverage (<10%) 4MPy adsorbs preferentially at elbow sites of the Herringbone reconstruction and at step edges of the Au(111). Increasing coverage (but still <30%) results in formation of molecular chains followed, at even higher coverage, by a 3-dimensional growth. Detailed analysis of z-V spectroscopy (ramping the tunneling bias V while keeping the tunneling current constant) provides information on the bias dependent apparent height of a single 4MPy/Au(111) as well as on the local density of states (LDOS) of single and chain 4MPy molecules in comparison to the bare Au(111) surface revealing a significant shift of the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) towards lower energy for molecules within chains. Additionally, the data provide no evidence that for these samples prepared in UHV the adsorption of 4MPy on Au(111) requires mediating Au adatoms. Also, clear indications are given that the adsorption does not induce a strong reduction of the Au DOS close to its Fermi energy. Finally, in context of the apparent STM height of 4MPy molecules, the behavior of the differential barrier height Φ(diff)(V) = (∂(z)∂(V)I/∂(V)I)(2) on bare Au(111) and 4MPy/Au(111) is analyzed and the corresponding experimental values are applied to recover the LDOS of the molecule for unoccupied states according to a previously published numerical recipe [B. Koslowski, H. Pfeifer and P. Ziemann, Phys. Rev. B, 2009, 80, 165419 and M. Ziegler, N. Néel, A. Sperl, J. Kröger, and R. Berndt, Phys. Rev. B, 2009, 80, 125402]. In this way, one obtains a spectrum comprising a constant DOS of the Shockley-like surface state of Au(111) and a Lorentzian line attributed to the LUMO of 4MPy.
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Vibrational spectroscopy is a powerful tool to identify molecules and to characterise their chemical state. Inelastic electron tunnelling spectroscopy (IETS) combined with scanning tunnelling microscopy (STM) allows the application of vibrational analysis to a single molecule. Up to now, IETS was restricted to small species due to the complexity of vibration spectra for larger molecules. We extend the horizon of IETS for both experiment and theory by measuring the STM-IETS spectra of mercaptopyridine adsorbed on the (111) surface of gold and comparing it to theoretical spectra. Such complex spectra with more than 20 lines can be reliably determined and computed leading to completely new insights. Experimentally, the vibrational spectra exhibit a dependence on the specific adsorption site of the molecules. Theoretically, this dependence is only accessible if anharmonic contributions to the interaction potentials are included. These joint experimental and theoretical advances open new perspectives for structure determination of organic adlayers.
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Nickel oxide (NiO) nanoflowers, prepared by thermal decomposition, exhibit anomalous magnetic properties far below the blocking temperature, i.e., a cusp in both the zero-field-cooled and field-cooled curves at about 21 K. Detailed characterization discloses that the individual NiO nanoflower consists of porous crystals with holes (1.0-1.5 nm in size) inside. We believe that the low temperature magnetic feature observed here could be a new kind of spin transition for the uncompensated spins around the holes and will trigger more studies in other nanostructured antiferromagnetic materials.
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Even moderately small molecules like 2,2':5',2"-terthiophene exhibit quite rich vibrational spectra. Detection and assignment of vibronic transitions of such a single adsorbed molecule in inelastic electron tunneling spectroscopy (IETS) using scanning tunneling microscopy are notoriously hampered by noise and the low efficiency of inelastic channels of typically well below 1%. We demonstrate by a thorough statistical analysis that detection of almost all predicted transitions can be determined experimentally within the energy range 0-120 meV with an estimated detection limit for the efficiency of inelastic channels of â¼0.15%. The maximum accuracy of our transition energies is 2 meV and thus smaller than the thermal broadening at 5 K. On short time scales up to some hours, that accuracy appears to be limited by tunneling current noise. The present analysis confirms earlier results which showed that IETS obeys propensity rules rather than selection rules as observed for optical transitions. Furthermore, the previous indications that anharmonic components in the interaction potentials are important for calculating properties of molecular vibrations were corroborated.
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A newly modified fast temperature-stepping thermodenuder (TD) was coupled to a High Resolution Time-of-Flight Aerosol Mass Spectrometer for rapid determination of chemically resolved volatility of organic aerosols (OA) emitted from individual sources. The TD-AMS system was used to characterize primary OA (POA) from biomass burning, trash burning surrogates (paper and plastic), and meat cooking as well as chamber-generated secondary OA (SOA) from alpha-pinene and gasoline vapor. Almost all atmospheric models represent POA as nonvolatile, with no allowance for evaporation upon heating or dilution, or condensation upon cooling. Our results indicate that all OAs observed show semivolatile behavior and that most POAs characterized here were at least as volatile as SOA measured in urban environments. Biomass-burning OA (BBOA) exhibited a wide range of volatilities, but more often showed volatility similar to urban OA. Paper-burning resembles some types of BBOA because of its relatively high volatility and intermediate atomic oxygen-to-carbon (O/C) ratio, while meat-cooking OAs (MCOA) have consistently lower volatility than ambient OA. Chamber-generated SOA under the relatively high concentrations used intraditional experiments was significantly more volatile than urban SOA, challenging extrapolation of traditional laboratory volatility measurements to the atmosphere. Most OAs sampled show increasing O/C ratio and decreasing H/C (hydrogen-to-carbon) ratio with temperature, further indicating that more oxygenated OA components are typically less volatile. Future experiments should systematically explore a wider range of mass concentrations to more fully characterize the volatility distributions of these OAs.
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Aerossóis/química , Compostos Orgânicos/análise , Biomassa , Culinária , Incêndios , Temperatura Alta , Carne , Termografia , VolatilizaçãoRESUMO
Novel, nanostructured, carbon-supported Pt model electrodes with homogeneously distributed Pt nanoparticles of uniform size were fabricated and analyzed with respect to their electrochemical properties. For this purpose, Pt-salt-loaded micelles were deposited on a glassy carbon substrate and subsequently exposed to an oxygen plasma and a H2 atmosphere for removal of the polymer carriers and reduction of the Pt salt. The morphology of the resulting nanoparticles and their electrochemical/electrocatalytic properties were characterized by high-resolution scanning electron microscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, cyclic voltammetry, and differential electrochemical mass spectrometry for CO electrooxidation. The data demonstrate that this method is generally suited to the production of nanostructured model electrodes with well-defined and independently adjustable particle size and interparticle distance distributions, which are specifically suited for quantitative studies of transport processes in electrocatalytic reactions.