1 research outputs found
Brown Carbon Production in Ammonium- or Amine-Containing Aerosol Particles by Reactive Uptake of Methylglyoxal and Photolytic Cloud Cycling
The
effects of methylglyoxal uptake on the physical and optical
properties of aerosol containing amines or ammonium sulfate were determined
before and after cloud processing in a temperature- and RH-controlled
chamber. The formation of brown carbon was observed upon methylglyoxal
addition, detected as an increase in water-soluble organic carbon
mass absorption coefficients below 370 nm and as a drop in single-scattering
albedo at 450 nm. The imaginary refractive index component <i>k</i><sub>450</sub> reached a maximum value of 0.03 ± 0.009
with aqueous glycine aerosol particles. Browning of solid particles
occurred at rates limited by chamber mixing (<1 min), and in liquid
particles occurred more gradually, but in all cases occurred much
more rapidly than in bulk aqueous studies. Further browning in AS
and methylammonium sulfate seeds was triggered by cloud events with
chamber lights on, suggesting photosensitized brown carbon formation.
Despite these changes in optical aerosol characteristics, increases
in dried aerosol mass were rarely observed (<1 μg/m<sup>3</sup> in all cases), consistent with previous experiments on methylglyoxal.
Under dry, particle-free conditions, methylglyoxal reacted (presumably
on chamber walls) with methylamine with a rate constant <i>k</i> = (9 ± 2) × 10<sup>–17</sup> cm<sup>3</sup> molecule<sup>–1</sup> s<sup>–1</sup> at 294 K and activation energy <i>E</i><sub>a</sub> = 64 ± 37 kJ/mol