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1.
JACS Au ; 4(5): 1875-1882, 2024 May 27.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38818071

RESUMEN

Organic peroxy radicals (ROO•) are key oxidants in a wide range of chemical systems such as living organisms, chemical synthesis and polymerization systems, combustion systems, the natural environment, and the Earth's atmosphere. Although surfaces are ubiquitous in all of these systems, the interactions of organic peroxy radicals with these surfaces have not been studied until today because of a lack of adequate detection techniques. In this work, the uptake and reaction of gas-phase organic peroxy radicals (CH3OO• and i-C3H7OO•) with solid surfaces was studied by monitoring each radical specifically and in real-time with mass spectrometry. Our results show that the uptake of organic peroxy radicals varies widely with the surface material. While their uptake by borosilicate glass and perfluoroalkoxy alkanes (PFA) was negligible, it was substantial with metals and even dominated over the gas-phase reactions with stainless steel and aluminum. The results also indicate that these uptakes are controlled by redox reactions at the surfaces for which the products were analyzed. Our results show that the reactions of organic peroxy radicals with metal surfaces have to be carefully considered in all the experimental investigations of these radicals as they could directly impact the kinetic and mechanistic knowledge derived from such studies.

2.
Sci Rep ; 13(1): 20672, 2023 Nov 24.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38001267

RESUMEN

In Earth's atmosphere, the surface tension of sub-micron aerosol particles is suspected to affect their efficiency in becoming cloud droplets. But this quantity cannot be measured directly and is inferred from the chemical compounds present in aerosols. Amphiphilic surfactants have been evidenced in aerosols but experimental information on the surface properties of their mixtures with other aerosol components is lacking. This work explores experimentally the surface properties of aqueous mixtures of amphiphilic surfactants (SDS, Brij35, TritonX100, TritonX114, and CTAC) with inorganic salts (NaCl, (NH4)2SO4) and soluble organic acids (oxalic and glutaric acid) using pendant droplet tensiometry. Contrary to what could be expected, inorganic salts and organic acids systematically enhanced the efficiency of the surfactants rather than reduced it, by further lowering the surface tension and, in some cases, the CMC. Furthermore, all the mixtures studied were strongly non-ideal, some even displaying some synergism, thus demonstrating that the common assumption of ideality for aerosol mixtures is not valid. The molecular interactions between the mixture components were either in the bulk (salting out), in the mixed surface monolayer (synergy on the surface tension) or in the micelles (synergy on the CMC) and need to be included when describing such aerosol mixtures.

3.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 25(16): 11055-11074, 2023 Apr 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37039675

RESUMEN

The liquid-air surface tension of aqueous solutions is a fundamental quantity in multi-phase thermodynamics and fluid dynamics and thus relevant in many scientific and engineering fields. Various models have been proposed for its quantitative description. This Perspective gives an overview of the most popular models and their ability to reproduce experimental data of ten binary aqueous solutions of electrolytes and organic molecules chosen to be representative of different solute types. In addition, we propose a new model which reproduces sigmoidal curve shapes (Sigmoid model) to empirically fit experimental surface tension data. The surface tension of weakly surface-active substances is well reproduced by all models. In contrast, only few models successfully model the surface tension of aqueous solutions with strongly surface-active substances. For substances with a solubility limit, usually no experimental data is available for the surface tension of supersaturated solutions and the pure liquid solute. We discuss ways in which these can be estimated and emphasize the need for further research. The newly developed Sigmoid model best reproduces the surface tension of all tested solutions and can be recommended as a model for a broad range of binary mixtures and over the entire concentration range.

4.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 25(11): 7772-7782, 2023 Mar 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36857663

RESUMEN

Today, the reactions of gas-phase organic peroxy radicals (RO2) with unsaturated Volatile Organic Compounds (VOC) are expected to be negligible at room temperature and ignored in atmospheric chemistry. This assumption is based on combustion studies (T ≥ 360 K), which were the only experimental data available for these reactions until recently. These studies also reported epoxide formation as the only reaction channel. In this work, the products of the reactions of 1-pentylperoxy (C5H11O2) and methylperoxy (CH3O2) with 2,3-dimethyl-2-butene ("2,3DM2B") and isoprene were investigated at T = 300 ± 5 K with Proton Transfer Reaction Time-of-Flight Mass Spectrometry (PTR-ToF-MS) and Gas Chromatography/Electron Impact Mass Spectrometry. Unlike what was expected, the experiments showed no measurable formation of epoxide. However, RO2 + alkene was found to produce compounds retaining the alkene structure, such as 3-hydroxy-3-methyl-2-butanone (C5H10O2) with 2,3DM2B and 2-hydroxy-2-methyl-3-butenal (C5H8O2) and methyl vinyl ketone with isoprene, suggesting that these reactions proceed through another reaction pathway under atmospheric conditions. We propose that, instead of forming an epoxide, the alkyl radical produced by the addtion of RO2 onto the alkene reacts with oxygen, producing a peroxy radical. The corresponding mechanisms are consistent with the products observed in the experiments. This alternative pathway implies that, under atmospheric conditions, RO2 + alkene reactions are kinetically limited by the initial addition step and not by the epoxide formation proposed until now for combustion systems. Extrapolating the combustion data to room temperature thus underestimates the rate coefficients, which is consistent with those recently reported for these reactions at room temperature. While slow for many classes of RO2, these reactions could be non-negligible at room temperature for some functionalized RO2. They might thus need to be considered in laboratory studies using large alkene concentrations and in biogenically-dominated regions of the atmosphere.

5.
Langmuir ; 39(8): 2957-2965, 2023 Feb 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36795487

RESUMEN

The formation of liquid cloud droplets from aerosol particles in the Earth atmosphere is still under debate particularly because of the difficulties to quantify the importance of bulk and surface effects in these processes. Recently, single-particle techniques have been developed to access experimental key parameters at the scale of individual particles. Environmental scanning electron microscopy (ESEM) has the advantage to provide in situ monitoring of the water uptake of individual microscopic particles deposited on solid substrates. In this work, ESEM was used to compare droplet growth on pure ammonium sulfate (NH4)2SO4 and mixed sodium dodecyl sulfate/ammonium sulfate (SDS/(NH4)2SO4) particles and to explore the role of experimental parameters, such as the hydrophobic-hydrophilic character of the substrate, on this growth. With hydrophilic substrates, the growth on pure salt particles was strongly anisotropic, but this anisotropy was suppressed by the presence of SDS. With hydrophobic substrates, it is the wetting behavior of the liquid droplet that is impacted by the presence of SDS. The wetting behavior of the pure (NH4)2SO4 solution on a hydrophobic surface shows a step-by-step mechanism that can be attributed to successive pinning-depinning phenomena at the triple-phase line frontier. Unlike the pure (NH4)2SO4 solution, the mixed SDS/(NH4)2SO4 solution did not show such a mechanism. Therefore, the hydrophobic-hydrophilic character of the substrate plays an important role in the stability and dynamics of the liquid droplets' nucleation by water vapor condensation. In particular, hydrophilic substrates are not suited for the investigation of the hygroscopic properties (deliquescence relative humidity (DRH) and hygroscopic growth factor (GF)) of particles. Using hydrophobic substrates, data show that the DRH of (NH4)2SO4 particles is measured within 3% accuracy on the RH and their GF could indicate a size-dependent effect in the micrometer range. The presence of SDS does not seem to modify the DRH and GF of (NH4)2SO4 particles. This study shows that the water uptake on deposited particles is a complex process but, once carefully taken into account, ESEM is a suitable technique to study them.

6.
Chem Sci ; 12(35): 11676-11683, 2021 Sep 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34659702

RESUMEN

Until now the reactions of organic peroxy radicals (RO2) with alkenes in the gas phase have been essentially studied at high temperature (T ≥ 360 K) and in the context of combustion processes, while considered negligible in the Earth's atmosphere. In this work, the reactions of methyl-, 1-pentyl- and acetylperoxy radicals (CH3O2, C5H11O2, and CH3C(O)O2, respectively) with 2-methyl-2-butene, 2,3-dimethyl-2-butene and for the first time the atmospherically relevant isoprene, α-pinene, and limonene were studied at room temperature (298 ± 5 K). Monitoring directly the radicals with chemical ionization mass spectrometry led to rate coefficients larger than expected from previous combustion studies but following similar trends in terms of alkenes, with (in molecule-1 cm3 s-1) = 10-18 to 10-17 × 2/2 and = 10-14 to 10-13 × 5/5. While these reactions would be negligible for CH3O2 and aliphatic RO2 at room temperature, this might not be the case for acyl-, and perhaps hydroxy-, allyl- and other substituted RO2. Combining our results with the Structure-Activity Relationship (SAR) predicts k II(298 K) ∼10-14 molecule-1 cm3 s-1 for hydroxy- and allyl-RO2 from isoprene oxidation, potentially accounting for up to 14% of their sinks in biogenic-rich regions of the atmosphere and much more in laboratory studies.

7.
Environ Sci Technol ; 53(21): 12379-12388, 2019 Nov 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31553874

RESUMEN

Predicting the activation of submicrometer particles into cloud droplets in the atmosphere remains a challenge. The importance of surface tension, σ (mN m-1), in these processes has been evidenced by several works, but information on the "surfactants" lowering σ in actual atmospheric particles remains scarce. In this work, PM1 aerosols from urban, coastal, and remote regions of Europe (Lyon, France, Rogoznica, Croatia, and Pallas, Finland, respectively) were investigated and found to contain amphiphilic surfactants in concentrations up to 2.8 µg m-3 in the air and 1.3 M in the particle dry volume. In Pallas, correlations with the PM1 chemical composition showed that amphiphilic surfactants were present in the entire range of particle sizes, supporting recent works. This implied that they were present in hundreds to thousands of particles cm-3 and not only in a few large particles, as it has been hypothesized. Their adsorption isotherms and critical micelle concentration (CMC) were also determined. The low CMC obtained (3 × 10-5-9 × 10-3 M) implies that surface tension depression should be significant for all the particles containing these compounds, even at activation (growth factor ∼ 10). Amphiphilic surfactants are thus likely to enhance the CCN ability of submicrometer atmospheric particles.


Asunto(s)
Contaminantes Atmosféricos , Tensoactivos , Adsorción , Aerosoles , Europa (Continente) , Finlandia , Francia
8.
Environ Sci Technol ; 53(16): 9407-9417, 2019 Aug 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31329419

RESUMEN

Surfactants account for minor fractions of total organic carbon in the ocean but can significantly influence the production of primary marine aerosol particles (PMA) at the sea surface via modulation of bubble surface tension. During September and October 2016, model PMA (mPMA) were produced from seawater by bursting bubbles at two biologically productive and two oligotrophic stations in the western North Atlantic Ocean. Total concentrations of surfactants extracted from mPMA and seawater were quantified and characterized via measurements of surface tension isotherms and critical micelle concentrations (CMCs). Surfactant CMCs in biologically productive seawater were lower than those in the oligotrophic seawater suggesting that surfactant mixtures in the two regions were chemically distinct. mPMA surfactants were enriched in all regions relative to those in the associated seawater. Surface tension isotherms indicate that mPMA surfactants were weaker than corresponding seawater surfactants. mPMA from biologically productive seawater contained higher concentrations of surfactants than those produced from oligotrophic seawater, supporting the hypothesis that seawater surfactant properties modulate mPMA surfactant concentrations. Diel variability in concentrations of seawater and mPMA surfactants in some regions is consistent with biological and/or photochemical processing. This work demonstrates direct links between surfactants in mPMA and those in the associated seawater.


Asunto(s)
Agua de Mar , Tensoactivos , Aerosoles , Océano Atlántico , Tensión Superficial
9.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 58(39): 13976-13982, 2019 Sep 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31361086

RESUMEN

The autoxidation of organic peroxy radicals (RO2 ) into hydroperoxy-alkyl radicals (QOOH), then hydroperoxy-peroxy radicals (HOOQO2 ) is now considered to be important in the Earth's atmosphere. To avoid mechanistic uncertainties these reactions are best studied by monitoring the radicals. But for the volatile and aliphatic RO2 radicals playing key roles in the atmosphere this has long been an instrumental challenge. This work reports the first study of the autoxidation of aliphatic RO2 radicals and is based on monitoring RO2 and HOOQO2 radicals. The rate coefficients, kiso (s-1 ), were determined both experimentally and theoretically using MC-TST kinetic theory based on CCSD(T)//M06-2X quantum chemical methodologies. The results were in excellent agreement and confirmed that the first H-migration is strongly rate-limiting in the oxidation of non-oxygenated volatile organic compounds (VOCs). At higher relative humidity (2-30 %) water complexes were evidenced for HOOQO2 radicals, which could be an important fate for HOO-substituted RO2 radicals in the atmosphere.

10.
J Phys Chem A ; 121(44): 8453-8464, 2017 Nov 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29035543

RESUMEN

Organic peroxy radicals ("RO2", with R organic) are key intermediates in most oxygen-rich systems, where organic compounds are oxidized (natural environment, flames, combustion engines, living organisms, etc). But, until recently, techniques able to monitor simultaneously and distinguish between RO2 species ("speciated" detection) have been scarce, which has limited the understanding of complex systems containing these radicals. Mass spectrometry using proton transfer ionization has been shown previously to detect individual gas-phase RO2 separately. In this work, we illustrate its ability to speciate and monitor several RO2 simultaneously by investigating reactions involving CH3O2, CH3C(O)O2, c-C6H11O2, and (CH3)3CO2. The detection sensitivity of each of these radicals was estimated by titration with NO to between 50 and 1000 Hz/ppb, with a factor from 3 to 5 of uncertainties, mostly due to the uncertainties in knowing the amounts of added NO. With this, the RO2 concentration in the reactor was estimated between 1 × 1010 and 1 × 1012 molecules cm-3. When adding a second radical species to the reactor, the kinetics of the cross-reaction could be studied directly from the decay of the first radical. The time-evolution of two and sometimes three different RO2 was followed simultaneously, as the CH3O2 produced in further reaction steps was also detected in some systems. The rate coefficients obtained are (in molecule-1 cm3 s-1): kCH3O2+CH3C(O)O2 = 1.2 × 10-11, kCH3O2+t-butylO2 = 3.0 × 10-15, kc-hexylO2+CH3O2 = 1.2 × 10-13, kt-butylO2+CH3C(O)O2 = 3.7 × 10-14, and kc-hexylO2+t-butylO2 = 1.5 × 10-15. In spite of their good comparison with the literature and good reproducibility, large uncertainties (×5/5) are recommended on these results because of those in the detection sensitivities. This work is a first illustration of the potential applications of this technique for the investigation of organic radicals in laboratory and in more complex systems.

11.
J Vis Exp ; (122)2017 04 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28518073

RESUMEN

Surface-active compounds, or surfactants, present in atmospheric aerosols are expected to play important roles in the formation of liquid water clouds in the Earth's atmosphere, a central process in meteorology, hydrology, and for the climate system. But because specific extraction and characterization of these compounds have been lacking for decades, very little is known on their identity, properties, mode of action and origins, thus preventing the full understanding of cloud formation and its potential links with the Earth's ecosystems. In this paper we present recently developed methods for 1) the targeted extraction of all the surfactants from atmospheric aerosol samples and for the determination of 2) their absolute concentrations in the aerosol phase and 3) their static surface tension curves in water, including their Critical Micelle Concentration (CMC). These methods have been validated with 9 references surfactants, including anionic, cationic and non-ionic ones. Examples of results are presented for surfactants found in fine aerosol particles (diameter <1 µm) collected at a coastal site in Croatia and suggestions for future improvements and other characterizations than those presented are discussed.


Asunto(s)
Aerosoles/análisis , Fraccionamiento Químico/métodos , Tensoactivos/química , Tensoactivos/aislamiento & purificación , Atmósfera , Tensión Superficial , Tensoactivos/análisis , Agua/química
12.
Science ; 351(6280): 1396-7, 2016 Mar 25.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27013716
13.
Environ Sci Technol ; 50(6): 2974-82, 2016 Mar 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26895279

RESUMEN

Recent analyses of atmospheric aerosols from different regions have demonstrated the ubiquitous presence of strong surfactants and evidenced surface tension values, σ, below 40 mN m(-1), suspected to enhance the cloud-forming potential of these aerosols. In this work, this approach was further improved and combined with absolute concentration measurements of aerosol surfactants by colorimetric titration. This analysis was applied to PM2.5 aerosols collected at the Baltic station of Askö, Sweden, from July to October 2010. Strong surfactants were found in all the sampled aerosols, with σ = (32-40) ± 1 mN m(-1) and concentrations of at least 27 ± 6 mM or 104 ± 21 pmol m(-3). The absolute surface tension curves and critical micelle concentrations (CMC) determined for these aerosol surfactants show that (1) surfactants are concentrated enough in atmospheric particles to strongly depress the surface tension until activation, and (2) the surface tension does not follow the Szyszkowski equation during activation but is nearly constant and minimal, which provides new insights on cloud droplet activation. In addition, both the CMCs determined and the correlation (R(2) ∼ 0.7) between aerosol surfactant concentrations and chlorophyll-a seawater concentrations suggest a marine and biological origin for these compounds.


Asunto(s)
Aerosoles/química , Aniones/química , Atmósfera/química , Cationes/química , Tensoactivos/química , Agua/química , Monitoreo del Ambiente , Micelas , Tensión Superficial , Suecia
15.
Nat Commun ; 5: 3335, 2014 Feb 25.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24566451

RESUMEN

The activation of aerosol particles into cloud droplets in the Earth's atmosphere is both a key process for the climate budget and a main source of uncertainty. Its investigation is facing major experimental challenges, as no technique can measure the main driving parameters, the Raoult's term and surface tension, σ, for sub-micron atmospheric particles. In addition, the surfactant fraction of atmospheric aerosols could not be isolated until recently. Here we present the first dynamic investigation of the total surfactant fraction of atmospheric aerosols, evidencing adsorption barriers that limit their gradient (partitioning) in particles and should enhance their cloud-forming efficiency compared with current models. The results also show that the equilibration time of surfactants in sub-micron atmospheric particles should be beyond the detection of most on-line instruments. Such instrumental and theoretical shortcomings would be consistent with atmospheric and laboratory observations and could have limited the understanding of cloud activation until now.

16.
Environ Sci Technol ; 48(6): 3218-27, 2014 Mar 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24555477

RESUMEN

In recent years, it has been proposed that gas phase glyoxal could significantly contribute to ambient organic aerosol (OA) mass through multiphase chemistry. Of particular interest is the reaction between glyoxal and ammonium cations producing light-absorbing compounds such as imidazole derivatives. It was recently shown that imidazole-2-carboxaldehyde (IC) can act as a photosensitizer, initiating aerosol growth in the presence of gaseous volatile organic compounds. Given the potential importance of this new photosensitized growth pathway for ambient OA, the related reaction mechanism was investigated at a molecular level. Bulk and flow tube experiments were performed to identify major products of the reaction of limonene with the triplet state of IC by direct (±)ESI-HRMS and UPLC/(±)HESI-HRMS analysis. Detection of recombination products of IC with limonene or with itself, in bulk and flow tube experiments, showed that IC is able to initiate a radical chemistry in the aerosol phase under realistic irradiation conditions. Furthermore, highly oxygenated limonene reaction products were detected, clearly explaining the observed OA growth. The chemistry of peroxy radicals derived from limonene upon addition of oxygen explains the formation of such low-volatile compounds without any traditional gas phase oxidant.


Asunto(s)
Aerosoles/química , Monitoreo del Ambiente/métodos , Glioxal/química , Aerosoles/análisis , Ciclohexenos/química , Gases/análisis , Gases/química , Limoneno , Procesos Fotoquímicos , Terpenos/química
17.
Faraday Discuss ; 165: 123-34, 2013.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24601000

RESUMEN

Secondary organic aerosols (SOA), which are produced by the transformations of volatile organic compounds in the atmosphere, play a central role in air quality, public health, visibility and climate, but their formation and aging remain poorly characterized. This study evidences a new mechanism for SOA formation based on photosensitized particulate-phase chemistry. Experiments were performed with a horizontal aerosol flow reactor where the diameter growth of the particles was determined as a function of various parameters. In the absence of gas-phase oxidant, experiments in which ammonium sulfate seeds containing glyoxal were exposed to gas-phase limonene and UV light exhibited a photo-induced SOA growth. Further experiments showed that this growth was due to traces of imidazole-2-carboxaldehyde (IC) in the seeds, a condensation product of glyoxal acting as an efficient photosensitizer. Over a 19 min irradiation time, 50 nm seed particles containing this compound were observed to grow between 3.5 and 30 +/- 3% in the presence of either limonene, isoprene, alpha-pinene, beta-pinene, or toluene in concentrations between 1.8 and 352 ppmv. The other condensation products of glyoxal, imidazole (IM) and 2,2-bi1H-imidazole (BI), also acted as photosensitizer but with much less efficiency under the same conditions. In the atmosphere, glyoxal and potentially other gas precursors would thus produce efficient photosensitizers in aerosol and autophotocatalyze SOA growth.

18.
J Chromatogr A ; 1218(51): 9288-94, 2011 Dec 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22104215

RESUMEN

In order to facilitate the determination of the primary and secondary origin of atmospheric organic aerosols, a novel method involving chiral capillary gas chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry has been developed and validated. The method was focused on the analysis of 2-methylerythritol and 2-methylthreitol, considered to be tracers of secondary organic aerosols from the oxidation of atmospheric isoprene. The method was validated by performing various tests using authentic standards, including pure enantiomeric standards. The result showed that the analytical method itself does not affect the enantiomeric composition of the samples analyzed. The method was applied on atmospheric aerosols from a boreal forest collected in Aspvreten, Sweden and on laboratory samples obtained from liquid phase oxidation of isoprene and smog chamber experiments. Aerosol samples contained one enantiomer of 2-methylerythritol in significantly larger quantities than the others. In contrast, the liquid-phase oxidation of isoprene and its gas-phase oxidation in the smog chamber produced all enantiomers in equal quantities. The results obtained where the enantiomer fraction, EF, is larger than 0.50 suggest that 2-methyltetrols in atmospheric aerosols may also have biological origin. Information about the differences between enantiomer fractions obtained using this method brings new insights in the area of atmospheric aerosols.


Asunto(s)
Contaminantes Atmosféricos/análisis , Atmósfera/química , Eritritol/análogos & derivados , Cromatografía de Gases y Espectrometría de Masas/métodos , Aerosoles/análisis , Butadienos/análisis , Butadienos/química , Eritritol/análisis , Eritritol/química , Hemiterpenos/análisis , Hemiterpenos/química , Límite de Detección , Oxidación-Reducción , Pentanos/análisis , Pentanos/química , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados , Estereoisomerismo , Suecia , Árboles
19.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 12(15): 3864-72, 2010 Apr 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20358081

RESUMEN

In natural environments such as atmospheric aerosols, organic compounds coexist with inorganic salts but, until recently, were not thought to interact chemically. We have recently shown that inorganic ammonium ions, NH(4)(+), act as catalysts for acetal formation from glyoxal, a common atmospheric gas. In this work, we report that inorganic ammonium ions, NH(4)(+), and carbonate ions, CO(3)(2-), are also efficient catalysts for the aldol condensation of carbonyl compounds. In the case of NH(4)(+) this was not previously known, and was patented prior to this article. The kinetic results presented in this work show that, for the concentrations of ammonium and carbonate ions present in tropospheric aerosols, the aldol condensation of acetaldehyde and acetone could be as fast as in concentrated sulfuric acid and might compete with their reactions with OH radicals. These catalytic processes could produce significant amounts of polyconjugated, light-absorbing compounds in aerosols, and thus affect their direct forcing on climate. For organic gases with large Henry's law coefficients, these reactions could also result in a significant uptake and in the formation of secondary organic aerosols (SOA). This work reinforces the recent findings that inorganic salts are not inert towards organic compounds in aerosols and shows, in particular, that common ones, such as ammonium and carbonate salts, might even play important roles in their chemical transformations.

20.
J Phys Chem A ; 113(1): 231-7, 2009 Jan 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19118483

RESUMEN

Glyoxal, a common atmospheric gas, has been reported to be depleted in some regions of the atmosphere. The corresponding sink could be accounted for by reactions in or at the surface of atmospheric particles, but these reactions were not identified. Recently, we showed that inorganic ammonium ions, NH(4)(+), are efficient catalysts for reactions of carbonyl compounds, including glyoxal, in the liquid phase. To determine whether ammonium-catalyzed reactions can contribute to depletion of glyoxal in the atmosphere, the reactivity of this compound in aqueous solutions containing ammonium salts (ammonium sulfate, chloride, fluoride, and phosphate) at 298 K has been studied. The products identified by LC-HRMS and UV absorption revealed a mechanism involving two distinct pathways: a Bronsted acid pathway and an iminium pathway. The kinetics of the iminium pathway was studied by monitoring formation of a specific product. This pathway was second order in glyoxal in most of the solutions studied and should therefore be second order in most ammonium-containing aerosols in the atmosphere. The corresponding rate constant, k(II) (M(-1) s(-1)), increased strongly with ammonium ion activity, a(NH(4)(+)), and pH: k(II) (M(-1) s(-1)) = (2 +/- 1) x 10(-10) exp((1.5 +/- 0.8)aNH(4)(+)) exp((2.5 +/- 0.2)pH). This iminium pathway is a lower limit for the ammonium-catalyzed consumption of glyoxal, but the contribution of the acid pathway is expected to be small in tropospheric aerosols. With these results the reactive uptake of glyoxal on ammonium-containing aerosols was estimated and shown to be a possible explanation for depletion of this compound in Mexico City.


Asunto(s)
Glioxal/química , Compuestos de Amonio Cuaternario/química , Agua/química , Atmósfera/química , Catálisis , Concentración de Iones de Hidrógeno , Iones , Cinética , México , Estructura Molecular , Tamaño de la Partícula
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