Abstract

Abstract. Oxidation by hydroxyl radical (OH) and ozonolysis are the two major pathways of daytime biogenic volatile organic compound (BVOC) oxidation and secondary organic aerosol (SOA) formation. In this study, we investigated the particle formation of several common monoterpenes (α-pinene, β-pinene and limonene) by OH-dominated oxidation, which has seldom been investigated. OH oxidation experiments were carried out in the SAPHIR (Simulation of Atmospheric PHotochemistry In a large Reaction) chamber in Jülich, Germany, at low NOx (0.01 ~ 1 ppbV) and low ozone (O3) concentration (< 20 ppbV). OH concentration and total OH reactivity (kOH) were measured directly, and through this the overall reaction rate of total organics with OH in each reaction system was quantified. Multi-generation reaction process, particle growth, new particle formation (NPF), particle yield and chemical composition were analyzed and compared with that of monoterpene ozonolysis. Multi-generation products were found to be important in OH-dominated SOA formation. The relative role of functionalization and fragmentation in the reaction process of OH oxidation was analyzed by examining the particle mass and the particle size as a function of OH dose. We developed a novel method which quantitatively links particle growth to the reaction rate of OH with total organics in a reaction system. This method was also used to analyze the evolution of functionalization and fragmentation of organics in the particle formation by OH oxidation. It shows that functionalization of organics was dominant in the beginning of the reaction (within two lifetimes of the monoterpene) and fragmentation started to play an important role after that. We compared particle formation from OH oxidation with that from pure ozonolysis. In individual experiments, growth rates of the particle size did not necessarily correlate with the reaction rate of monoterpene with OH and O3. Comparing the size growth rates at the similar reaction rates of monoterpene with OH or O3 indicates that, generally, OH oxidation and ozonolysis had similar efficiency in particle growth. The SOA yield of α-pinene and limonene by ozonolysis was higher than that of OH oxidation. Aerosol mass spectrometry (AMS) shows SOA elemental composition from OH oxidation follows a slope shallower than −1 in the O / C vs. H / C diagram, also known as Van Krevelen diagram, indicating that oxidation proceeds without significant loss of hydrogen. SOA from OH oxidation had higher H / C ratios than SOA from ozonolysis. In ozonolysis, a process with significant hydrogen loss seemed to play an important role in SOA formation.

Highlights

  • As an important class of atmospheric aerosol, organic aerosol (OA) comprises a significant fraction of aerosol mass

  • In the Oxidation by hydroxyl radical (OH) oxidation, we found the transition of functionalization and fragmentation correlated with the evolution of particle size and particle mass as a function of OH dose

  • A novel method was developed which quantitatively linked the particle mass growth rate to the reaction rate of OH with organics via a metric of particle growth efficiency of OH reaction. This method was used to examine the role of functionalization and fragmentation during the particle formation of monoterpenes by OH oxidation

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Summary

Introduction

As an important class of atmospheric aerosol, organic aerosol (OA) comprises a significant fraction of aerosol mass. It accounts for around 50 % of dry tropospheric submicron aerosol mass in many urban and rural locations (Kanakidou et al, 2005; Jimenez et al, 2009; Zhang et al, 2011). A large fraction of organic aerosol is contributed by secondary organic aerosol (SOA). In spite of intensive studies in recent years, the source of SOA still has considerable uncertainties with the estimated global source ranging from 120 to 1820 Tg a−1

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