9 research outputs found

    Real Time in Situ Chemical Characterization of Submicrometer Organic Particles Using Direct Analysis in Real Time-Mass Spectrometry

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    Direct analysis in real time mass spectrometry (DART-MS) is used to analyze the surface chemical composition of nanometer-sized organic aerosol particles in real time at atmospheric pressure. By introducing a stream of particles in between the DART ionization source and the atmospheric pressure inlet of the mass spectrometer, the aerosol is exposed to a thermal flow of helium or nitrogen gas containing some fraction of metastable helium atoms or nitrogen molecules. In this configuration, the molecular constituents of organic particles are desorbed, ionized, and detected with reduced molecular ion fragmentation, allowing for compositional identification. Aerosol particles detected include alkanes, alkenes, acids, esters, alcohols, aldehydes, and amino acids. The ion signal produced by DART-MS scales with the aerosol surface area rather than volume, suggesting that DART-MS is a viable technique to measure the chemical composition of the particle interface. For oleic acid, particle size measurements of the aerosol stream exiting the ionization region suggest that the probing depth depends upon the desorption temperature, and the probing depth is estimated to be on the order of 5 nm for a 185 nm diameter particle at a DART heater temperature of 500 °C with nitrogen as the DART gas. The reaction of ozone with submicrometer oleic acid particles is measured to demonstrate the ability of this technique to identify products and quantify reaction rates in a heterogeneous reaction

    Photochemical Aging of α‑pinene and β‑pinene Secondary Organic Aerosol formed from Nitrate Radical Oxidation

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    The nitrate radical (NO<sub>3</sub>) is the dominant nighttime oxidant in most urban and rural environments and reacts rapidly with biogenic volatile organic compounds to form secondary organic aerosol (SOA) and organic nitrates (ON). Here, we study the formation of SOA and ON from the NO<sub>3</sub> oxidation of two monoterpenes (α-pinene and β-pinene) and investigate how they evolve during photochemical aging. High SOA mass loadings are produced in the NO<sub>3</sub>+β-pinene reaction, during which we detected 41 highly oxygenated gas- and particle-phase ON possessing 4 to 9 oxygen atoms. The fraction of particle-phase ON in the β-pinene SOA remains fairly constant during photochemical aging. In contrast to the NO<sub>3</sub>+β-pinene reaction, low SOA mass loadings are produced during the NO<sub>3</sub>+α-pinene reaction, during which only 5 highly oxygenated gas- and particle-phase ON are detected. The majority of the particle-phase ON evaporates from the α-pinene SOA during photochemical aging, thus exhibiting a drastically different behavior from that of β-pinene SOA. Our results indicate that nighttime ON formed by NO<sub>3</sub>+monoterpene chemistry can serve as either permanent or temporary NO<sub><i>x</i></sub> sinks depending on the monoterpene precursor

    Secondary Organic Aerosol (SOA) from Nitrate Radical Oxidation of Monoterpenes: Effects of Temperature, Dilution, and Humidity on Aerosol Formation, Mixing, and Evaporation

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    Nitrate radical (NO<sub>3</sub>) oxidation of biogenic volatile organic compounds (BVOC) is important for nighttime secondary organic aerosol (SOA) formation. SOA produced at night may evaporate the following morning due to increasing temperatures or dilution of semivolatile compounds. We isothermally dilute the oxidation products from the limonene+NO<sub>3</sub> reaction at 25 °C and observe negligible evaporation of organic aerosol via dilution. The SOA yields from limonene+NO<sub>3</sub> are approximately constant (∼174%) at 25 °C and range from 81 to 148% at 40 °C. Based on the difference in yields between the two temperatures, we calculated an effective enthalpy of vaporization of 117–237 kJ mol<sup>–1</sup>. The aerosol yields at 40 °C can be as much as 50% lower compared to 25 °C. However, when aerosol formed at 25 °C is heated to 40 °C, only about 20% of the aerosol evaporates, which could indicate a resistance to aerosol evaporation. To better understand this, we probe the possibility that SOA from limonene+NO<sub>3</sub> and β-pinene+NO<sub>3</sub> reactions is highly viscous. We demonstrate that particle morphology and evaporation is dependent on whether SOA from limonene is formed before or during the formation of SOA from β-pinene. This difference in particle morphology is present even at high relative humidity (∼70%)

    Fundamental Time Scales Governing Organic Aerosol Multiphase Partitioning and Oxidative Aging

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    Traditional descriptions of gas–particle partitioning of organic aerosols (OA) rely solely on thermodynamic properties (e.g., volatility). Under realistic conditions where phase partitioning is dynamic rather than static, the transformation of OA involves the interplay of multiphase partitioning with oxidative aging. A key challenge remains in quantifying the fundamental time scales for evaporation and oxidation of semivolatile OA. In this paper, we use isomer-resolved product measurements of a series of normal-alkanes (C<sub>18</sub>, C<sub>20</sub>, C<sub>22</sub>, and C<sub>24</sub>) to distinguish between gas-phase and heterogeneous oxidation products formed by reaction with hydroxyl radicals (OH). The product isomer distributions when combined with kinetics measurements of evaporation and oxidation enable a quantitative description of the multiphase time scales to be simulated using a single-particle kinetic model. Multiphase partitioning and oxidative transformation of semivolatile normal-alkanes under laboratory conditions is largely controlled by the particle phase state, since the time scales of heterogeneous oxidation and evaporation are found to occur on competing time scales (on the order of 10<sup>–1</sup> h). This is in contrast to atmospheric conditions where heterogeneous oxidation time scales are expected to be much longer (on the order of 10<sup>2</sup> h), with gas-phase oxidation being the dominant process regardless of the evaporation kinetics. Our results demonstrate the dynamic nature of OA multiphase partitioning and oxidative aging and reveal that the fundamental time scales of these processes are crucial for reliably extending laboratory measurements of OA phase partitioning and aging to the atmosphere

    Heterogeneous OH Oxidation of Motor Oil Particles Causes Selective Depletion of Branched and Less Cyclic Hydrocarbons

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    Motor oil serves as a useful model system for atmospheric oxidation of hydrocarbon mixtures typical of anthropogenic atmospheric particulate matter, but its complexity often prevents comprehensive chemical speciation. In this work we fully characterize this formerly “unresolved complex mixture” at the molecular level using recently developed soft ionization gas chromatography techniques. Nucleated motor oil particles are oxidized in a flow tube reactor to investigate the relative reaction rates of observed hydrocarbon classes: alkanes, cycloalkanes, bicycloalkanes, tricycloalkanes, and steranes. Oxidation of hydrocarbons in a complex aerosol is found to be efficient, with approximately three-quarters (0.72 ± 0.06) of OH collisions yielding a reaction. Reaction rates of individual hydrocarbons are structurally dependent: compared to normal alkanes, reaction rates increased by 20–50% with branching, while rates decreased ∼20% per nonaromatic ring present. These differences in rates are expected to alter particle composition as a function of oxidation, with depletion of branched and enrichment of cyclic hydrocarbons. Due to this expected shift toward ring-opening reactions heterogeneous oxidation of the unreacted hydrocarbon mixture is less likely to proceed through fragmentation pathways in more oxidized particles. Based on the observed oxidation-induced changes in composition, isomer-resolved analysis has potential utility for determining the photochemical age of atmospheric particulate matter with respect to heterogeneous oxidation

    Formation of Secondary Organic Aerosol from the Direct Photolytic Generation of Organic Radicals

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    The immense complexity inherent in the formation of secondary organic aerosol (SOA)due primarily to the large number of oxidation steps and reaction pathways involvedhas limited the detailed understanding of its underlying chemistry. As a means of simplifying such complexity, here we demonstrate the formation of SOA through the photolysis of gas-phase alkyl iodides, which generates organic peroxy radicals of known structure. In contrast to standard OH-initiated oxidation experiments, photolytically initiated oxidation forms a limited number of products via a single reactive step. As is typical for SOA, the yields of aerosol generated from the photolysis of alkyl iodides depend on aerosol loading, indicating the semivolatile nature of the particulate species. However, the aerosol was observed to be higher in volatility and less oxidized than in previous multigenerational studies of alkane oxidation, suggesting that additional oxidative steps are necessary to produce oxidized semivolatile material in the atmosphere. Despite the relative simplicity of this chemical system, the SOA mass spectra are still quite complex, underscoring the wide range of products present in SOA

    OH-Initiated Heterogeneous Oxidation of Cholestane: A Model System for Understanding the Photochemical Aging of Cyclic Alkane Aerosols

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    Aerosols containing aliphatic hydrocarbons play a substantial role in the urban atmosphere. Cyclic alkanes constitute a large fraction of aliphatic hydrocarbon emissions originating from incomplete combustion of diesel fuel and motor oil. In the present study, cholestane (C<sub>27</sub>H<sub>48</sub>) is used as a model system to examine the OH-initiated heterogeneous oxidation pathways of cyclic alkanes in a photochemical flow tube reactor. Oxidation products are collected on filters and analyzed by a novel soft ionization two-dimensional gas chromatography/mass spectrometry technique. The analysis reveals that the first-generation functionalization products (cholestanones, cholestanals, and cholestanols) are the dominant reaction products that account for up to 70% by mass of the total speciated compounds. The ratio of first-generation carbonyls to alcohols is near unity at every oxidation level. Among the cholestanones/cholestanals, 55% are found to have the carbonyl group on the rings of the androstane skeleton, while 74% of cholestanols have the hydroxyl group on the rings. Particle-phase oxidation products with carbon numbers less than 27 (i.e., “fragmentation products”) and higher-generation functionalization products are much less abundant. Carbon bond cleavage was found to occur only on the side chain. Tertiary-carbon alkoxy radicals are suggested to play an important role in governing both the distribution of functionalization products (via alkoxy radical isomerization and reaction with oxygen) and the fragmentation products (via alkoxy radical decomposition). These results provide new insights into the oxidation mechanism of cyclic alkanes

    The Influence of Molecular Structure and Aerosol Phase on the Heterogeneous Oxidation of Normal and Branched Alkanes by OH

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    Insights into the influence of molecular structure and thermodynamic phase on the chemical mechanisms of hydroxyl radical-initiated heterogeneous oxidation are obtained by identifying reaction products of submicrometer particles composed of either <i>n</i>-octacosane (C<sub>28</sub>H<sub>58</sub>, a linear alkane) or squalane (C<sub>30</sub>H<sub>62</sub>, a highly branched alkane) and OH. A common pattern is observed in the positional isomers of octacosanone and octacosanol, with functionalization enhanced toward the end of the molecule. This suggests that relatively large linear alkanes are structured in submicrometer particles such that their ends are oriented toward the surface. For squalane, positional isomers of first-generation ketones and alcohols also form in distinct patterns. Ketones are favored on carbons adjacent to tertiary carbons, while hydroxyl groups are primarily found on tertiary carbons but also tend to form toward the end of the molecule. Some first-generation products, viz., hydroxycarbonyls and diols, contain two oxygen atoms. These results suggest that alkoxy radicals are important intermediates and undergo both intramolecular (isomerization) and intermolecular (chain propagation) hydrogen abstraction reactions. Oxidation products with carbon number less than the parent alkane’s are observed to a much greater extent for squalane than for <i>n</i>-octacosane oxidation and can be explained by the preferential cleavage of bonds involving tertiary carbons

    Improved Resolution of Hydrocarbon Structures and Constitutional Isomers in Complex Mixtures Using Gas Chromatography-Vacuum Ultraviolet-Mass Spectrometry

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    Understanding the composition of complex hydrocarbon mixtures is important for environmental studies in a variety of fields, but many prevalent compounds cannot be confidently identified using traditional gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS) techniques. This work uses vacuum-ultraviolet (VUV) ionization to elucidate the structures of a traditionally “unresolved complex mixture” by separating components by GC retention time, <i>t</i><sub>R</sub>, and mass-to-charge ratio, <i>m</i>/<i>z</i>, which are used to determine carbon number, <i>N</i><sub>C</sub>, and the number of rings and double bonds, <i>N</i><sub>DBE</sub>. Constitutional isomers are resolved on the basis of <i>t</i><sub>R</sub>, enabling the most complete quantitative analysis to date of structural isomers in an environmentally relevant hydrocarbon mixture. Unknown compounds are classified in this work by carbon number, degree of saturation, presence of rings, and degree of branching, providing structural constraints. The capabilities of this analysis are explored using diesel fuel, in which constitutional isomer distribution patterns are shown to be reproducible between carbon numbers and follow predictable rules. Nearly half of the aliphatic hydrocarbon mass is shown to be branched, suggesting branching is more important in diesel fuel than previously shown. The classification of unknown hydrocarbons and the resolution of constitutional isomers significantly improves resolution capabilities for any complex hydrocarbon mixture
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