Abstract

Hydroxyalkyl hydroperoxides (HHPs), formed in the reactions of Criegee intermediates (CIs) with water vapour, play essential roles in the formation of secondary organic aerosol (SOA) under atmospheric conditions. However, the transformation mechanism for OH-initiated oxidation of HHPs is remain incompletely understood. Herein, the quantum chemical and kinetics modeling methods are applied to insight into the detailed mechanisms of OH-initiated oxidation of distinct HHPs formed form the reactions of CH2OO, anti-CH3CHOO and (CH3)2COO) with water vapor. The calculations show that H-abstraction by OH radical from the -OOH group of distinct HHPs is predominate as the main products peroxyl radicals (RO2), and the barrier of dominant pathway is increased as the number of methyl group is increased. In pristine environments, the self-reaction of RO2 radical initially produces tetroxide intermediate via a head-to-head interaction, then it decomposes into propagation and termination products through the asymmetric two-step O-O bond scission, in which the rate-limiting step is the first O-O bond cleavage. The barrier height of distinct RO2 radicals reactions with HO2 radical is independent on the number of methyl substitution. Compared to the rate coefficient of parent system, it is increased by a factor of 3–5 when one or two methyl groups introduce into the C1-position. The autoxidation of RO2 radicals are unlikely to proceed in the atmosphere due to their dramatically high barriers and strongly endergonic. In urban environments, the rate-limiting step is the hydrogen abstraction by O2 in the processes of HOCH2OO radical reaction with NO, while it becomes the O-O bond scission when one or two methyl substitutions occur at the C1-position of HOCH2OO radical. These new findings are expected to deepen our current understanding for the photochemistry oxidation of hydroperoxides under realistic atmospheric conditions.

Highlights

  • Hydroxyalkyl hydroperoxides (HHPs), generated via the reactions of Criegee intermediates (CIs) with water vapour, play important roles in the formation of secondary organic aerosol (SOA) (Qiu et al, 2019; Kumar et al, 2014)

  • We mainly investigate the detailed mechanisms and kinetic properties of distinct HHPs oxidation initiated by OH radical by employing quantum chemical and kinetics modeling methods

  • Conclusion are summarized as follows: (a) The H-abstraction by OH radical from the -OOH group of distinct HHPs leading to the formation of RO2 radicals is preferable, and the barrier of dominant pathway is increased as the number of methyl group is increased

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Summary

Introduction

Hydroxyalkyl hydroperoxides (HHPs), generated via the reactions of Criegee intermediates (CIs) with water vapour, play important roles in the formation of secondary organic aerosol (SOA) (Qiu et al, 2019; Kumar et al, 2014). The CIs formed from the ozonolysis of alkenes are characterized by high reactivity and excess energies, which can proceed either prompt unimolecular decay to OH radical or, after collisional stabilization, bimolecular reactions with various trance gases like SO2, NO2 and H2O to produce sulfate, nitrate and SOA, thereby influencing air quality and human health (Lester and Klippenstein, 2018; Chen et al, 2017, 2019; Liu et al, 2019; Chhantyal-Pun et al, 2017; Anglada and Solé, 2016; Gong and Chen, 2021). While the product of syn-CH3CHOO reaction with water is not taken into consideration because it mainly proceeds thermal unimolecular decay to OH radical, rather than reaction with water (Zhou et al, 2019)

Electronic structure and energy calculations
Kinetics calculations
Initiation reaction of HHPs with OH radical
Subsequent reactions of H-abstraction products RO2 radicals in pristine environment
Reactions mechanism for the self-reaction of RO2 radicals
Reactions mechanism for the reaction of RO2 with HO2 radical
Reactions mechanism for the autoxidation of RO2 radicals
Subsequent reactions of H-abstraction products RO2 radicals in urban environments
Conclusions
Full Text
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