Abstract

Abstract. Organic aerosol constitutes a major fraction of the global aerosol burden and is predominantly formed as secondary organic aerosol (SOA). Environmental chambers have been used extensively to study aerosol formation and evolution under controlled conditions similar to the atmosphere, but quantitative prediction of the outcome of these experiments is generally not achieved, which signifies our lack in understanding of these results and limits their portability to large-scale models. In general, kinetic models employing state-of-the-art explicit chemical mechanisms fail to describe the mass concentration and composition of SOA obtained from chamber experiments. Specifically, chemical reactions including the nitrate radical (NO3) are a source of major uncertainty for assessing the chemical and physical properties of oxidation products. Here, we introduce a kinetic model that treats gas-phase chemistry, gas–particle partitioning, particle-phase oligomerization, and chamber vapor wall loss and use it to describe the oxidation of the monoterpenes α-pinene and limonene with NO3. The model can reproduce aerosol mass and nitration degrees in experiments using either pure precursors or their mixtures and infers volatility distributions of products, branching ratios of reactive intermediates and particle-phase reaction rates. The gas-phase chemistry in the model is based on the Master Chemical Mechanism (MCM) but trades speciation of single compounds for the overall ability of quantitatively describing SOA formation by using a lumped chemical mechanism. The complex branching into a multitude of individual products in MCM is replaced in this model with product volatility distributions and detailed peroxy (RO2) and alkoxy (RO) radical chemistry as well as amended by a particle-phase oligomerization scheme. The kinetic parameters obtained in this study are constrained by a set of SOA formation and evaporation experiments conducted in the Georgia Tech Environmental Chamber (GTEC) facility. For both precursors, we present volatility distributions of nitrated and non-nitrated reaction products that are obtained by fitting the kinetic model systematically to the experimental data using a global optimization method, the Monte Carlo genetic algorithm (MCGA). The results presented here provide new mechanistic insight into the processes leading to formation and evaporation of SOA. Most notably, the model suggests that the observed slow evaporation of SOA could be due to reversible oligomerization reactions in the particle phase. However, the observed non-linear behavior of precursor mixtures points towards a complex interplay of reversible oligomerization and kinetic limitations of mass transport in the particle phase, which is explored in a model sensitivity study. The methodologies described in this work provide a basis for quantitative analysis of multi-source data from environmental chamber experiments but also show that a large data pool is needed to fully resolve uncertainties in model parameters.

Highlights

  • Atmospheric aerosol particles play an important role in the Earth system by influencing weather and climate, enabling long-range transport of chemical compounds and negativelyPublished by Copernicus Publications on behalf of the European Geosciences Union.T

  • While the lower secondary organic aerosol (SOA) yield at 40 ◦C compared to 25 ◦C can be explained with the equilibrium partitioning theory, the slightly lower mass yield observed at 5 ◦C in this study cannot be

  • An inverse modeling approach is utilized alongside laboratory chamber experiments to gain insights into the molecular-level processes which occur during the formation and evaporation of SOA from the oxidation of αpinene, limonene, and mixtures of both precursors with NO3

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Summary

Introduction

Atmospheric aerosol particles play an important role in the Earth system by influencing weather and climate, enabling long-range transport of chemical compounds and negatively. Application of MCM to the oxidation of monoterpenes with NO3 leads to a significant underestimation of particle mass and pON / OA as this mechanism is missing several important chemical reactions, for example, oxidation of the second double bond of limonene (Boyd et al, 2017; Faxon et al, 2018) It has been hypothesized and shown recently that a majority of SOA might exist in oligomerized form (Kalberer et al, 2004; Gao et al, 2010), which might alter their evaporation behavior (Baltensperger et al, 2005; D’Ambro et al, 2018). We conduct new environmental chamber experiments and apply a novel kinetic modeling framework to investigate whether gas-phase chemistry, equilibrium partitioning, and particle-phase chemistry can accurately describe the formation and evaporation of monoterpene SOA from oxidation of α-pinene, limonene, and mixtures of both precursors with NO3. The kinetic modeling framework consisting of a kinetic multi-layer model based on KM-GAP and the MCGA algorithm is used as an analysis tool to explore the mechanistic interactions between reactive intermediates and oxidation products that can lead to non-additivity of the investigated reaction systems

Experimental and theoretical methods
Kinetic model
Lumped chemical mechanism
Global optimization
Results and discussion
Organic nitrate fractions
Deviation between the model and the experiment
Gas-phase chemistry
Oligomerization
Mass transfer limitations
Conclusions and outlook
Full Text
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