1 research outputs found
Gas-to-Particle Partitioning of Products from Ozonolysis of Δ<sup>3</sup>‑Carene and the Effect of Temperature and Relative Humidity
Formation of oxidized
products from Δ3-carene
(C10H16) ozonolysis and their gas-to-particle
partitioning at three temperatures (0, 10, and 20 °C) under dry
conditions (<2% RH) and also at 10 °C under humid (78% RH)
conditions were studied using a time-of-flight chemical ionization
mass spectrometer (ToF-CIMS) combined with a filter inlet for gases
and aerosols (FIGAERO). The Δ3-carene ozonolysis
products detected by the FIGAERO-ToF-CIMS were dominated by semivolatile
organic compounds (SVOCs). The main effect of increasing temperature
or RH on the product distribution was an increase in fragmentation
of monomer compounds (from C10 to C7 compounds),
potentially via alkoxy scission losing a C3 group. The
equilibrium partitioning coefficient estimated according to equilibrium
partitioning theory shows that the measured SVOC products distribute
more into the SOA phase as the temperature decreases from 20 to 10
and 0 °C and for most products as the RH increases from <2
to 78%. The temperature dependency of the saturation vapor pressure
(above an assumed liquid state), derived from the partitioning method,
also allows for a direct way to obtain enthalpy of vaporization for
the detected species without accessibility of authentic standards
of the pure substances. This method can provide physical properties,
beneficial for, e.g., atmospheric modeling, of complex multifunctional
oxidation products
