Abstract
Oxidation chemistry controls both combustion processes and the atmospheric transformation of volatile emissions. In combustion engines, radical species undergo isomerization reactions that allow fast addition of O2. This chain reaction, termed autoxidation, is enabled by high engine temperatures, but has recently been also identified as an important source for highly oxygenated species in the atmosphere, forming organic aerosol. Conventional knowledge suggests that atmospheric autoxidation requires suitable structural features, like double bonds or oxygen-containing moieties, in the precursors. With neither of these functionalities, alkanes, the primary fuel type in combustion engines and an important class of urban trace gases, are thought to have minor susceptibility to extensive autoxidation. Here, utilizing state-of-the-art mass spectrometry, measuring both radicals and oxidation products, we show that alkanes undergo autoxidation much more efficiently than previously thought, both under atmospheric and combustion conditions. Even at high concentrations of NOX, which typically rapidly terminates autoxidation in urban areas, the studied C6–C10 alkanes produce considerable amounts of highly oxygenated products that can contribute to urban organic aerosol. The results of this inter-disciplinary effort provide crucial information on oxidation processes in both combustion engines and the atmosphere, with direct implications for engine efficiency and urban air quality.
Highlights
Oxidation chemistry controls both combustion processes and the atmospheric transformation of volatile emissions
Autoxidation plays an important role in a wide range of chemical systems[1,2,3,4,5,6], contributing to the spoilage of food and wine, ignition in internal combustion engines, and formation of atmospheric organic aerosol (OA) from volatile emissions
We explore the autoxidation of alkanes, an important class of molecules found in fuels and ubiquitous in urban atmospheric environments[10]
Summary
Oxidation chemistry controls both combustion processes and the atmospheric transformation of volatile emissions. Atmospheric Pressure interface Time of Flight mass spectrometer, CI-APi-TOF (see “Methods”) has been especially powerful, enabling discovery of highly oxygenated organic molecules (HOM, with 6 or more O-atoms, Supplementary Note 1)[4,11], with molar yields on the order of a few percent from several biogenic (e.g., monoterpenes) and anthropogenic (e.g. aromatics) VOC12,13.
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