| Literature DB >> 26473383 |
Kelly L Pereira1, Jacqueline F Hamilton1, Andrew R Rickard1,2, William J Bloss3, Mohammed S Alam3, Marie Camredon4, Martyn W Ward1, Kevin P Wyche5, Amalia Muñoz6, Teresa Vera6, Mónica Vázquez6, Esther Borrás6, Milagros Ródenas6.
Abstract
Secondary organic aerosol (SOA) is well-known to have adverse effects on air quality and human health. However, the dynamic mechanisms occurring during SOA formation and evolution are poorly understood. The time-resolved SOA composition formed during the photo-oxidation of three aromatic compounds, methyl chavicol, toluene and 4-methyl catechol, were investigated at the European Photoreactor. SOA was collected using a particle into liquid sampler and analyzed offline using state-of-the-art mass spectrometry to produce temporal profiles of individual photo-oxidation products. In the photo-oxidation of methyl chavicol, 70 individual compounds were characterized and three distinctive temporal profile shapes were observed. The calculated mass fraction (Ci,aer/COA) of the individual SOA compounds showed either a linear trend (increasing/decreasing) or exponential decay with time. Substituted nitrophenols showed an exponential decay, with the nitro-group on the aromatic ring found to control the formation and loss of these species in the aerosol phase. Nitrophenols from both methyl chavicol and toluene photo-oxidation experiments showed a strong relationship with the NO2/NO (ppbv/ppbv) ratio and were observed during initial SOA growth. The location of the nitrophenol aromatic substitutions was found to be critically important, with the nitrophenol in the photo-oxidation of 4-methyl catechol not partitioning into the aerosol phase until irradiation had stopped; highlighting the importance of studying SOA formation and evolution at a molecular level.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26473383 DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.5b03377
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Sci Technol ISSN: 0013-936X Impact factor: 9.028