OH-initiated heterogeneous oxidation of internally-mixed squalane and secondary organic aerosol

Kolesar, KR; Buffaloe, G; Wilson, KR; Cappa, CD

HERO ID

2369609

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2014

Language

English

PMID

24555558

HERO ID 2369609
In Press No
Year 2014
Title OH-initiated heterogeneous oxidation of internally-mixed squalane and secondary organic aerosol
Authors Kolesar, KR; Buffaloe, G; Wilson, KR; Cappa, CD
Journal Environmental Science & Technology
Volume 48
Issue 6
Page Numbers 3196-3202
Abstract Recent work has established that secondary organic aerosol (SOA) can exist as an amorphous solid, leading to various suggestions that the addition of SOA coatings to existing particles will decrease the reactivity of those particles toward common atmospheric oxidants. Experimental evidence suggests that O3 is unable to physically diffuse through an exterior semisolid or solid layer thus inhibiting reaction with the core. The extent to which this suppression in reactivity occurs for OH has not been established, nor has this been demonstrated specifically for SOA. Here, measurements of the influence of adding a coating of α-pinene+O3 SOA onto squalane particles on the OH-initiated heterogeneous oxidation rate are reported. The chemical composition of the oxidized internally mixed particles was monitored online using a vacuum ultraviolet-aerosol mass spectrometer. Variations in the squalane oxidation rate with particle composition were quantified by measurement of the effective uptake coefficient, γeff, which is the loss rate of a species relative to the oxidant-particle collision rate. Instead of decreasing, the measured γeff increased continuously as the SOA coating thickness increased, by a factor of ∼2 for a SOA coating thickness of 42 nm (corresponding to ca. two-thirds of the particle mass). These results indicate that heterogeneous oxidation of ambient aerosol by OH radicals is not inhibited by SOA coatings, and further that condensed phase chemical pathways and rates in organic particles depend importantly on composition.
Doi 10.1021/es405177d
Pmid 24555558
Wosid WOS:000333776000015
Url http://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/es405177d
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English