UVB-irradiated Laboratory-generated Secondary Organic Aerosol Extracts Have Increased Cloud Condensation Nuclei Abilities: Comparison with Dissolved Organic Matter and Implications for the Photomineralization Mechanism

During their atmospheric lifetime, organic compounds within aerosols are exposed to sunlight and undergo photochemical processing. This atmospheric aging process changes the ability of organic aerosols to form cloud droplets and consequently impacts aerosol–cloud interactions. We recently reported c...

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Main Authors: Nadine Borders-Dedekind, Sergey Nizkorodov, Kristopher McNeill
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Swiss Chemical Society 2020-03-01
Series:CHIMIA
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.ingentaconnect.com/contentone/scs/chimia/2020/00000074/00000003/art00007
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spelling doaj-04e34fa9eb964451aa0b35d41aba78262020-11-25T03:51:41ZdeuSwiss Chemical SocietyCHIMIA0009-42932673-24242020-03-0174314214810.2533/chimia.2020.142UVB-irradiated Laboratory-generated Secondary Organic Aerosol Extracts Have Increased Cloud Condensation Nuclei Abilities: Comparison with Dissolved Organic Matter and Implications for the Photomineralization MechanismNadine Borders-Dedekind0Sergey Nizkorodov1Kristopher McNeill2Institute for Biogeochemistry and Pollutant Dynamics, ETH Zurich, Universitätstrasse 16, CH-8092 Zurich, Switzerland; Institute for Atmospheric and Climate Sciences, ETH Zurich, Universitatstrasse 16, CH-8092 Zurich, SwitzerlandDepartment of Chemistry, University of California, Irvine, 377 Rowland Hall, Irvine, USAInstitute for Biogeochemistry and Pollutant Dynamics, ETH Zurich, Universitätstrasse 16, CH-8092 Zurich, SwitzerlandDuring their atmospheric lifetime, organic compounds within aerosols are exposed to sunlight and undergo photochemical processing. This atmospheric aging process changes the ability of organic aerosols to form cloud droplets and consequently impacts aerosol–cloud interactions. We recently reported changes in the cloud forming properties of aerosolized dissolved organic matter (DOM) due to a photomineralization mechanism, transforming high-molecular weight compounds in DOM into organic acids, CO and CO2. To strengthen the implications of this mechanism to atmospheric aerosols, we now extend our previous dataset and report identical cloud activation experiments with laboratory-generated secondary organic aerosol (SOA) extracts. The SOA was produced from the oxidation of α-pinene and naphthalene, a representative biogenic and anthropogenic source of SOA, respectively. Exposure of aqueous solutions of SOA to UVB irradiation increased the dried organic material's hygroscopicity and thus its ability to form cloud droplets, consistent with our previous observations for DOM. We propose that a photomineralization mechanism is also at play in these SOA extracts. These results help to bridge the gap between DOM and SOA photochemistry by submitting two differently-sourced organic matter materials to identical experimental conditions for optimal comparison.https://www.ingentaconnect.com/contentone/scs/chimia/2020/00000074/00000003/art00007cloud condensation nucleidissolved organic matterphotochemistryphotomineralization
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nadine Borders-Dedekind
Sergey Nizkorodov
Kristopher McNeill
spellingShingle Nadine Borders-Dedekind
Sergey Nizkorodov
Kristopher McNeill
UVB-irradiated Laboratory-generated Secondary Organic Aerosol Extracts Have Increased Cloud Condensation Nuclei Abilities: Comparison with Dissolved Organic Matter and Implications for the Photomineralization Mechanism
CHIMIA
cloud condensation nuclei
dissolved organic matter
photochemistry
photomineralization
author_facet Nadine Borders-Dedekind
Sergey Nizkorodov
Kristopher McNeill
author_sort Nadine Borders-Dedekind
title UVB-irradiated Laboratory-generated Secondary Organic Aerosol Extracts Have Increased Cloud Condensation Nuclei Abilities: Comparison with Dissolved Organic Matter and Implications for the Photomineralization Mechanism
title_short UVB-irradiated Laboratory-generated Secondary Organic Aerosol Extracts Have Increased Cloud Condensation Nuclei Abilities: Comparison with Dissolved Organic Matter and Implications for the Photomineralization Mechanism
title_full UVB-irradiated Laboratory-generated Secondary Organic Aerosol Extracts Have Increased Cloud Condensation Nuclei Abilities: Comparison with Dissolved Organic Matter and Implications for the Photomineralization Mechanism
title_fullStr UVB-irradiated Laboratory-generated Secondary Organic Aerosol Extracts Have Increased Cloud Condensation Nuclei Abilities: Comparison with Dissolved Organic Matter and Implications for the Photomineralization Mechanism
title_full_unstemmed UVB-irradiated Laboratory-generated Secondary Organic Aerosol Extracts Have Increased Cloud Condensation Nuclei Abilities: Comparison with Dissolved Organic Matter and Implications for the Photomineralization Mechanism
title_sort uvb-irradiated laboratory-generated secondary organic aerosol extracts have increased cloud condensation nuclei abilities: comparison with dissolved organic matter and implications for the photomineralization mechanism
publisher Swiss Chemical Society
series CHIMIA
issn 0009-4293
2673-2424
publishDate 2020-03-01
description During their atmospheric lifetime, organic compounds within aerosols are exposed to sunlight and undergo photochemical processing. This atmospheric aging process changes the ability of organic aerosols to form cloud droplets and consequently impacts aerosol–cloud interactions. We recently reported changes in the cloud forming properties of aerosolized dissolved organic matter (DOM) due to a photomineralization mechanism, transforming high-molecular weight compounds in DOM into organic acids, CO and CO2. To strengthen the implications of this mechanism to atmospheric aerosols, we now extend our previous dataset and report identical cloud activation experiments with laboratory-generated secondary organic aerosol (SOA) extracts. The SOA was produced from the oxidation of α-pinene and naphthalene, a representative biogenic and anthropogenic source of SOA, respectively. Exposure of aqueous solutions of SOA to UVB irradiation increased the dried organic material's hygroscopicity and thus its ability to form cloud droplets, consistent with our previous observations for DOM. We propose that a photomineralization mechanism is also at play in these SOA extracts. These results help to bridge the gap between DOM and SOA photochemistry by submitting two differently-sourced organic matter materials to identical experimental conditions for optimal comparison.
topic cloud condensation nuclei
dissolved organic matter
photochemistry
photomineralization
url https://www.ingentaconnect.com/contentone/scs/chimia/2020/00000074/00000003/art00007
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AT sergeynizkorodov uvbirradiatedlaboratorygeneratedsecondaryorganicaerosolextractshaveincreasedcloudcondensationnucleiabilitiescomparisonwithdissolvedorganicmatterandimplicationsforthephotomineralizationmechanism
AT kristophermcneill uvbirradiatedlaboratorygeneratedsecondaryorganicaerosolextractshaveincreasedcloudcondensationnucleiabilitiescomparisonwithdissolvedorganicmatterandimplicationsforthephotomineralizationmechanism
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