Abstract

Abstract. Benzene cluster cations are a sensitive and selective reagent ion for chemical ionization of select biogenic volatile organic compounds. We have previously reported the sensitivity of a field deployable chemical ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometer (CI-ToFMS), using benzene cluster cation ion chemistry, for detection of dimethyl sulfide, isoprene and α-pinene. Here, we present laboratory measurements of the sensitivity of the same instrument to a series of terpenes, including isoprene, α-pinene, β-pinene, D-limonene, ocimene, β-myrcene, farnesene, α-humulene, β-caryophyllene, and isolongifolene at atmospherically relevant mixing ratios (< 100 pptv). In addition, we determine the dependence of CI-ToFMS sensitivity on the reagent ion neutral delivery concentration and water vapor concentration. We show that isoprene is primarily detected as an adduct (C5H8 ⋅ C6H6+) with a sensitivity ranging between 4 and 10 ncps ppt−1, which depends strongly on the reagent ion precursor concentration, de-clustering voltages, and specific humidity (SH). Monoterpenes are detected primarily as the molecular ion (C10H16+) with an average sensitivity, across the five measured compounds, of 14 ± 3 ncps ppt−1 for SH between 7 and 14 g kg−1, typical of the boreal forest during summer. Sesquiterpenes are detected primarily as the molecular ion (C15H24+) with an average sensitivity, across the four measured compounds, of 9.6 ± 2.3 ncps ppt−1, that is also independent of specific humidity. Comparable sensitivities across broad classes of terpenes (e.g., monoterpenes and sesquiterpenes), coupled to the limited dependence on specific humidity, suggest that benzene cluster cation CI-ToFMS is suitable for field studies of biosphere–atmosphere interactions.

Highlights

  • The annual global emission of biogenic volatile organic compounds (BVOCs) is estimated at 1000 TgC yr−1 and exceeds the total VOC emissions from anthropogenic activities (Guenther et al, 2012; IPCC)

  • We show that benzene cluster cations are a sensitive reagent ion for chemical ionization of select biogenic volatile organic compounds

  • We demonstrate that isoprene is primarily detected as an adduct (C5H8 · C6H+6 ) with a sensitivity ranging between 4 and 10 ncps ppt−1, which depends strongly on the reagent ion precursor concentration and specific humidity (SH)

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Summary

Introduction

The annual global emission of biogenic volatile organic compounds (BVOCs) is estimated at 1000 TgC yr−1 and exceeds the total VOC emissions from anthropogenic activities (Guenther et al, 2012; IPCC). The field-deployable CIMS that utilizes a time-of-flight mass analyzer (ToFMS), previously described by Kim et al, combines the efficient production and transmission of ions at high pressure (e.g., 75 mbar) with the high ion duty cycle of orthogonal extraction ToFMS (Bertram et al, 2011) This instrument configuration is highly sensitive and capable of measuring and logging mass spectra (10–800 m/Q) at rates higher than 10 Hz (Bertram et al, 2011). These benefits make CI-ToFMS highly applicable for studying atmospheric exchange processes of trace gases at the air–ocean interface that require fast response rates (Kim et al, 2014) At these pressures, the distribution of benzene clusters and their associated ion–molecule reactions times are not well constrained. We examine the de-clustering power of the radio frequency (RF)-only quadrupole to better determine the cluster distribution present in the ion molecule reaction chamber

Materials
Chemical ionization mass spectrometer
Liquid calibration unit
Benzene cluster cation mass spectra
Impact of benzene neutral concentration on terpene sensitivity
Isoprene
Monoterpenes
Sesquiterpenes
Conclusions
Full Text
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