Chemical aging of <i>m</i>-xylene secondary organic aerosol: laboratory chamber study

Secondary organic aerosol (SOA) can reside in the atmosphere for a week or more. While its initial formation from the gas-phase oxidation of volatile organic compounds tends to take place in the first few hours after emission, SOA can continue to evolve chemically over its atmospheric lifetime. Simu...

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Main Authors: J. H. Seinfeld, R. C. Flagan, J. S. Craven, L. D. Yee, C. L. Loza, P. S. Chhabra
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2012-01-01
Series:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Online Access:http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/12/151/2012/acp-12-151-2012.pdf
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spelling doaj-5c9b8ee4a6834062be78f2269c885f102020-11-24T22:39:16ZengCopernicus PublicationsAtmospheric Chemistry and Physics1680-73161680-73242012-01-0112115116710.5194/acp-12-151-2012Chemical aging of <i>m</i>-xylene secondary organic aerosol: laboratory chamber studyJ. H. SeinfeldR. C. FlaganJ. S. CravenL. D. YeeC. L. LozaP. S. ChhabraSecondary organic aerosol (SOA) can reside in the atmosphere for a week or more. While its initial formation from the gas-phase oxidation of volatile organic compounds tends to take place in the first few hours after emission, SOA can continue to evolve chemically over its atmospheric lifetime. Simulating this chemical aging over an extended time in the laboratory has proven to be challenging. We present here a procedure for studying SOA aging in laboratory chambers that is applied to achieve 36 h of oxidation. The formation and evolution of SOA from the photooxidation of <i>m</i>-xylene under low-NO<sub>x</sub> conditions and in the presence of either neutral or acidic seed particles is studied. In SOA aging, increasing molecular functionalization leads to less volatile products and an increase in SOA mass, whereas gas- or particle-phase fragmentation chemistry results in more volatile products and a loss of SOA. The challenge is to discern from measured chamber variables the extent to which these processes are important for a given SOA system. In the experiments conducted, <i>m</i>-xylene SOA mass, calculated under the assumption of size-invariant particle composition, increased over the initial 12–13 h of photooxidation and decreased beyond that time, suggesting the existence of fragmentation chemistry. The oxidation of the SOA, as manifested in the O:C elemental ratio and fraction of organic ion detected at <i>m/z</i> 44 measured by the Aerodyne aerosol mass spectrometer, increased continuously starting after 5 h of irradiation until the 36 h termination. This behavior is consistent with an initial period in which, as the mass of SOA increases, products of higher volatility partition to the aerosol phase, followed by an aging period in which gas- and particle-phase reaction products become increasingly more oxidized. When irradiation is stopped 12.4 h into one experiment, and OH generation ceases, minimal loss of SOA is observed, indicating that the loss of SOA is either light- or OH-induced. Chemical ionization mass spectrometry measurements of low-volatility <i>m</i>-xylene oxidation products exhibit behavior indicative of continuous photooxidation chemistry. A condensed chemical mechanism of <i>m</i>-xylene oxidation under low-NO<sub>x</sub> conditions is capable of reproducing the general behavior of gas-phase evolution observed here. Moreover, order of magnitude analysis of the mechanism suggests that gas-phase OH reaction of low volatility SOA precursors is the dominant pathway of aging in the <i>m</i>-xylene system although OH reaction with particle surfaces cannot be ruled out. Finally, the effect of size-dependent particle composition and size-dependent particle wall loss rates on different particle wall loss correction methods is discussed.http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/12/151/2012/acp-12-151-2012.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author J. H. Seinfeld
R. C. Flagan
J. S. Craven
L. D. Yee
C. L. Loza
P. S. Chhabra
spellingShingle J. H. Seinfeld
R. C. Flagan
J. S. Craven
L. D. Yee
C. L. Loza
P. S. Chhabra
Chemical aging of <i>m</i>-xylene secondary organic aerosol: laboratory chamber study
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
author_facet J. H. Seinfeld
R. C. Flagan
J. S. Craven
L. D. Yee
C. L. Loza
P. S. Chhabra
author_sort J. H. Seinfeld
title Chemical aging of <i>m</i>-xylene secondary organic aerosol: laboratory chamber study
title_short Chemical aging of <i>m</i>-xylene secondary organic aerosol: laboratory chamber study
title_full Chemical aging of <i>m</i>-xylene secondary organic aerosol: laboratory chamber study
title_fullStr Chemical aging of <i>m</i>-xylene secondary organic aerosol: laboratory chamber study
title_full_unstemmed Chemical aging of <i>m</i>-xylene secondary organic aerosol: laboratory chamber study
title_sort chemical aging of <i>m</i>-xylene secondary organic aerosol: laboratory chamber study
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
issn 1680-7316
1680-7324
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Secondary organic aerosol (SOA) can reside in the atmosphere for a week or more. While its initial formation from the gas-phase oxidation of volatile organic compounds tends to take place in the first few hours after emission, SOA can continue to evolve chemically over its atmospheric lifetime. Simulating this chemical aging over an extended time in the laboratory has proven to be challenging. We present here a procedure for studying SOA aging in laboratory chambers that is applied to achieve 36 h of oxidation. The formation and evolution of SOA from the photooxidation of <i>m</i>-xylene under low-NO<sub>x</sub> conditions and in the presence of either neutral or acidic seed particles is studied. In SOA aging, increasing molecular functionalization leads to less volatile products and an increase in SOA mass, whereas gas- or particle-phase fragmentation chemistry results in more volatile products and a loss of SOA. The challenge is to discern from measured chamber variables the extent to which these processes are important for a given SOA system. In the experiments conducted, <i>m</i>-xylene SOA mass, calculated under the assumption of size-invariant particle composition, increased over the initial 12–13 h of photooxidation and decreased beyond that time, suggesting the existence of fragmentation chemistry. The oxidation of the SOA, as manifested in the O:C elemental ratio and fraction of organic ion detected at <i>m/z</i> 44 measured by the Aerodyne aerosol mass spectrometer, increased continuously starting after 5 h of irradiation until the 36 h termination. This behavior is consistent with an initial period in which, as the mass of SOA increases, products of higher volatility partition to the aerosol phase, followed by an aging period in which gas- and particle-phase reaction products become increasingly more oxidized. When irradiation is stopped 12.4 h into one experiment, and OH generation ceases, minimal loss of SOA is observed, indicating that the loss of SOA is either light- or OH-induced. Chemical ionization mass spectrometry measurements of low-volatility <i>m</i>-xylene oxidation products exhibit behavior indicative of continuous photooxidation chemistry. A condensed chemical mechanism of <i>m</i>-xylene oxidation under low-NO<sub>x</sub> conditions is capable of reproducing the general behavior of gas-phase evolution observed here. Moreover, order of magnitude analysis of the mechanism suggests that gas-phase OH reaction of low volatility SOA precursors is the dominant pathway of aging in the <i>m</i>-xylene system although OH reaction with particle surfaces cannot be ruled out. Finally, the effect of size-dependent particle composition and size-dependent particle wall loss rates on different particle wall loss correction methods is discussed.
url http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/12/151/2012/acp-12-151-2012.pdf
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