Abstract

Abstract. The partitioning of semivolatile organic compounds between the gas phase and aerosol particles is an important source of secondary organic aerosol (SOA). Gas-particle partitioning of organic and inorganic species is influenced by the physical state and water content of aerosols, and therefore ambient relative humidity (RH), as well as temperature and organic loading levels. We introduce a novel combination of the thermodynamic models AIOMFAC (for liquid mixture non-ideality) and EVAPORATION (for pure compound vapor pressures) with oxidation product information from the Master Chemical Mechanism (MCM) for the computation of gas-particle partitioning of organic compounds and water. The presence and impact of a liquid-liquid phase separation in the condensed phase is calculated as a function of variations in relative humidity, organic loading levels, and associated changes in aerosol composition. We show that a complex system of water, ammonium sulfate, and SOA from the ozonolysis of α-pinene exhibits liquid-liquid phase separation over a wide range of relative humidities (simulated from 30% to 99% RH). Since fully coupled phase separation and gas-particle partitioning calculations are computationally expensive, several simplified model approaches are tested with regard to computational costs and accuracy of predictions compared to the benchmark calculation. It is shown that forcing a liquid one-phase aerosol with or without consideration of non-ideal mixing bears the potential for vastly incorrect partitioning predictions. Assuming an ideal mixture leads to substantial overestimation of the particulate organic mass, by more than 100% at RH values of 80% and by more than 200% at RH values of 95%. Moreover, the simplified one-phase cases stress two key points for accurate gas-particle partitioning calculations: (1) non-ideality in the condensed phase needs to be considered and (2) liquid-liquid phase separation is a consequence of considerable deviations from ideal mixing in solutions containing inorganic ions and organics that cannot be ignored. Computationally much more efficient calculations relying on the assumption of a complete organic/electrolyte phase separation below a certain RH successfully reproduce gas-particle partitioning in systems in which the average oxygen-to-carbon (O:C) ratio is lower than ~0.6, as in the case of α-pinene SOA, and bear the potential for implementation in atmospheric chemical transport models and chemistry-climate models. A full equilibrium calculation is the method of choice for accurate offline (box model) computations, where high computational costs are acceptable. Such a calculation enables the most detailed predictions of phase compositions and provides necessary information on whether assuming a complete organic/electrolyte phase separation is a good approximation for a given aerosol system. Based on the group-contribution concept of AIOMFAC and O:C ratios as a proxy for polarity and hygroscopicity of organic mixtures, the results from the α-pinene system are also discussed from a more general point of view.

Highlights

  • Gas-particle partitioning is a key process in the formation and evolution of secondary organic aerosol (SOA)

  • In the presence of a liquid mixture consisting of water and organic components, a solid ammonium sulfate seed will come into equilibrium with the solution

  • A combination of a gas-phase chemical mechanism, a detailed group-contribution vapor pressure model and a group-contribution activity coefficient model, MCMEVAPORATION-AIOMFAC, has been applied in this study to a realistic organic-inorganic gas-aerosol system. 14 organic species represent semivolatile SOA from α-pinene ozonolysis, and ammonium sulfate represents a typical electrolyte found in aqueous aerosols

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Summary

Introduction

Gas-particle partitioning is a key process in the formation and evolution of secondary organic aerosol (SOA). Zobrist et al, 2008, 2011; Virtanen et al, 2010; Cappa and Wilson, 2011; Vaden et al, 2011; Pfrang et al, 2011; Shiraiwa et al, 2011; Poschl, 2011; Koop et al, 2011) Such a semi-solid or amorphous solid state effectively impedes gas-particle mass transfer and bulk diffusion in aerosols – with important consequences for heterogeneous chemistry, aerosol growth and evaporation behavior, and characteristic equilibration times (Tong et al, 2011; Shiraiwa et al, 2011). We test different model simplifications with the goal to reduce computational costs while maintaining reasonable accuracy of gas-particle partitioning predictions

Theory and methods
Gas-particle partitioning framework
MCM-EVAPORATION-AIOMFAC approach
Master chemical mechanism
EVAPORATION
AIOMFAC
Liquid-liquid phase separation
Overview of calculation cases
Comparison of chamber data and model results
Oxygen-to-carbon ratio
Phase separation and RH-dependence in salt-containing system
Phase compositions
Loading effects and water content
Evaluation of simplified modeling cases
Forced non-ideal and ideal one-phase cases
LLPS onset parametrization cases
CLLPS case
Computational aspects
Implications for atmospheric modeling
Conclusions
Full Text
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