Abstract

The multiphase oxidation of SO2 to sulfate in aerosol particles is a key process in atmospheric chemistry. However, there is a large gap between the observed and simulated sulfate concentrations during severe haze events. To fill in the gaps in understanding SO2 oxidation chemistry, a combination of experiments and theoretical calculations provided evidence for the direct, spin-forbidden excitation of SO2 to its triplet states using UVA photons at an air-water interface, followed by reactions with water and O2 that facilitate the rapid formation of sulfate. The estimated reaction energy for the whole process, 3SO2 + H2O + 1/2O2 → HSO4- + H+ (298 K, 1 M), was ΔGr = -107.8 kcal·mol-1. Moreover, calculations revealed that this was a multistep reaction involving submerged, small energy barriers (∼10 kcal·mol-1). These results indicate that photochemical oxidation of SO2 at the air-water interface with solar actinic light may be an important unaccounted source of sulfate aerosols under polluted haze conditions.

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