Literature DB >> 29510022

Nitrogen-Containing, Light-Absorbing Oligomers Produced in Aerosol Particles Exposed to Methylglyoxal, Photolysis, and Cloud Cycling.

David O De Haan1, Enrico Tapavicza2, Matthieu Riva3, Tianqu Cui3, Jason D Surratt3, Adam C Smith2, Mary-Caitlin Jordan2, Shiva Nilakantan2, Marisol Almodovar2, Tiffany N Stewart1, Alexia de Loera1, Audrey C De Haan1, Mathieu Cazaunau4, Aline Gratien4, Edouard Pangui4, Jean-François Doussin4.   

Abstract

Aqueous methylglyoxal chemistry has often been implicated as an important source of oligomers in atmospheric aerosol. Here we report on chemical analysis of brown carbon aerosol particles collected from cloud cycling/photolysis chamber experiments, where gaseous methylglyoxal and methylamine interacted with glycine, ammonium, or methylammonium sulfate seed particles. Eighteen N-containing oligomers were identified in the particulate phase by liquid chromatography/diode array detection/electrospray ionization high-resolution quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry. Chemical formulas were determined and, for 6 major oligomer products, MS2 fragmentation spectra were used to propose tentative structures and mechanisms. Electronic absorption spectra were calculated for six tentative product structures by an ab initio second order algebraic-diagrammatic-construction/density functional theory approach. For five structures, matching calculated and measured absorption spectra suggest that they are dominant light-absorbing species at their chromatographic retention times. Detected oligomers incorporated methylglyoxal and amines, as expected, but also pyruvic acid, hydroxyacetone, and significant quantities of acetaldehyde. The finding that ∼80% (by mass) of detected oligomers contained acetaldehyde, a methylglyoxal photolysis product, suggests that daytime methylglyoxal oligomer formation is dominated by radical addition mechanisms involving CH3CO*. These mechanisms are evidently responsible for enhanced browning observed during photolytic cloud events.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 29510022     DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b06105

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Sci Technol        ISSN: 0013-936X            Impact factor:   9.028


  6 in total

1.  First-Principles Prediction of Wavelength-Dependent Product Quantum Yields.

Authors:  Travis Thompson; Enrico Tapavicza
Journal:  J Phys Chem Lett       Date:  2018-08-07       Impact factor: 6.475

2.  TURBOMOLE: Modular program suite for ab initio quantum-chemical and condensed-matter simulations.

Authors:  Sree Ganesh Balasubramani; Guo P Chen; Sonia Coriani; Michael Diedenhofen; Marius S Frank; Yannick J Franzke; Filipp Furche; Robin Grotjahn; Michael E Harding; Christof Hättig; Arnim Hellweg; Benjamin Helmich-Paris; Christof Holzer; Uwe Huniar; Martin Kaupp; Alireza Marefat Khah; Sarah Karbalaei Khani; Thomas Müller; Fabian Mack; Brian D Nguyen; Shane M Parker; Eva Perlt; Dmitrij Rappoport; Kevin Reiter; Saswata Roy; Matthias Rückert; Gunnar Schmitz; Marek Sierka; Enrico Tapavicza; David P Tew; Christoph van Wüllen; Vamsee K Voora; Florian Weigend; Artur Wodyński; Jason M Yu
Journal:  J Chem Phys       Date:  2020-05-14       Impact factor: 3.488

3.  Tuning the photoreactivity of Z-hexatriene photoswitches by substituents - a non-adiabatic molecular dynamics study.

Authors:  Enrico Tapavicza; Travis Thompson; Kenneth Redd; Dan Kim
Journal:  Phys Chem Chem Phys       Date:  2018-10-03       Impact factor: 3.676

4.  Carbenium ion-mediated oligomerization of methylglyoxal for secondary organic aerosol formation.

Authors:  Yuemeng Ji; Qiuju Shi; Yixin Li; Taicheng An; Jun Zheng; Jianfei Peng; Yanpeng Gao; Jiangyao Chen; Guiying Li; Yuan Wang; Fang Zhang; Annie L Zhang; Jiayun Zhao; Mario J Molina; Renyi Zhang
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2020-06-03       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  Azologization and repurposing of a hetero-stilbene-based kinase inhibitor: towards the design of photoswitchable sirtuin inhibitors.

Authors:  Christoph W Grathwol; Nathalie Wössner; Sören Swyter; Adam C Smith; Enrico Tapavicza; Robert K Hofstetter; Anja Bodtke; Manfred Jung; Andreas Link
Journal:  Beilstein J Org Chem       Date:  2019-09-16       Impact factor: 2.883

6.  Kinetics, Products, and Brown Carbon Formation by Aqueous-Phase Reactions of Glycolaldehyde with Atmospheric Amines and Ammonium Sulfate.

Authors:  Alyssa A Rodriguez; Michael A Rafla; Hannah G Welsh; Elyse A Pennington; Jason R Casar; Lelia N Hawkins; Natalie G Jimenez; Alexia de Loera; Devoun R Stewart; Antonio Rojas; Matthew-Khoa Tran; Peng Lin; Alexander Laskin; Paola Formenti; Mathieu Cazaunau; Edouard Pangui; Jean-François Doussin; David O De Haan
Journal:  J Phys Chem A       Date:  2022-08-04       Impact factor: 2.944

  6 in total

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