Atmospheric chemistry of 4:2 fluorotelomer alcohol (n-C4F9CH2CH2OH): products and mechanism of Cl atom initiated oxidation in the presence of NOx

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Standard

Atmospheric chemistry of 4:2 fluorotelomer alcohol (n-C4F9CH2CH2OH) : products and mechanism of Cl atom initiated oxidation in the presence of NOx. / Andersen, Mads Peter Sulbæk; Nielsen, Ole John; Hurley, M. D.; Ball, J. C.; Wallington, T. J.; Ellis, D. A.; Martin, J. W.; Mabury, S. A.

I: Journal of Physical Chemistry Part A: Molecules, Spectroscopy, Kinetics, Environment and General Theory, Bind 109, Nr. 9, 2005, s. 1849-1856.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Andersen, MPS, Nielsen, OJ, Hurley, MD, Ball, JC, Wallington, TJ, Ellis, DA, Martin, JW & Mabury, SA 2005, 'Atmospheric chemistry of 4:2 fluorotelomer alcohol (n-C4F9CH2CH2OH): products and mechanism of Cl atom initiated oxidation in the presence of NOx', Journal of Physical Chemistry Part A: Molecules, Spectroscopy, Kinetics, Environment and General Theory, bind 109, nr. 9, s. 1849-1856. https://doi.org/10.1021/jp045672g

APA

Andersen, M. P. S., Nielsen, O. J., Hurley, M. D., Ball, J. C., Wallington, T. J., Ellis, D. A., Martin, J. W., & Mabury, S. A. (2005). Atmospheric chemistry of 4:2 fluorotelomer alcohol (n-C4F9CH2CH2OH): products and mechanism of Cl atom initiated oxidation in the presence of NOx. Journal of Physical Chemistry Part A: Molecules, Spectroscopy, Kinetics, Environment and General Theory, 109(9), 1849-1856. https://doi.org/10.1021/jp045672g

Vancouver

Andersen MPS, Nielsen OJ, Hurley MD, Ball JC, Wallington TJ, Ellis DA o.a. Atmospheric chemistry of 4:2 fluorotelomer alcohol (n-C4F9CH2CH2OH): products and mechanism of Cl atom initiated oxidation in the presence of NOx. Journal of Physical Chemistry Part A: Molecules, Spectroscopy, Kinetics, Environment and General Theory. 2005;109(9):1849-1856. https://doi.org/10.1021/jp045672g

Author

Andersen, Mads Peter Sulbæk ; Nielsen, Ole John ; Hurley, M. D. ; Ball, J. C. ; Wallington, T. J. ; Ellis, D. A. ; Martin, J. W. ; Mabury, S. A. / Atmospheric chemistry of 4:2 fluorotelomer alcohol (n-C4F9CH2CH2OH) : products and mechanism of Cl atom initiated oxidation in the presence of NOx. I: Journal of Physical Chemistry Part A: Molecules, Spectroscopy, Kinetics, Environment and General Theory. 2005 ; Bind 109, Nr. 9. s. 1849-1856.

Bibtex

@article{f1bb310865f041328d74f72a588584fd,
title = "Atmospheric chemistry of 4:2 fluorotelomer alcohol (n-C4F9CH2CH2OH): products and mechanism of Cl atom initiated oxidation in the presence of NOx",
abstract = "Smog chamber/FTIR techniques were used to study the Cl atom initiated oxidation of 4:2 fluorotelomer alcohol (C4F9CH2CH2OH, 4:2 FTOH) in the presence of NOx in 700 Torr of N-2/O-2 diluent at 296 K. Chemical activation effects play an important role in the atmospheric chemistry of the peroxy, and possibly the alkoxy, radicals derived from 4:2 FTOH. Cl atoms react with C4F9CH2CH2OH to give C4F9CH2C.HOH radicals which add O-2 to give chemically activated alpha-hydroxyperoxy radicals, [C4F9CH2C(OO.)HOH]*. In 700 Torr of N-2/ O-2 at 296 K, approximately 50% of the [C4F9CH2C(OO.)HOH]* radicals decompose ``promptly'' to give HO2 radicals and C4F9CH2CHO, the remaining [C4F9CH2C(OO.)HOH]* radicals undergo collisional deactivation to give thermalized peroxy radicals, C4F9CH2C(OO.)HOH. Decomposition to HO2 and C4F9CH2CHO is the dominant atmospheric fate of the thermalized peroxy radicals. In the presence of excess NO, the thermalized peroxy radicals react to give C4F9CH2C(O-.)HOH radicals which then decompose at a rate >2.5 x 10(6) s(-1) to give HC(O)OH and the alkyl radical C4F9CH2.. The primary products of 4:2 FTOH oxidation in the presence of excess NOx are C4F9CH2CHO, C4F9CHO, and HCOOH. Secondary products include C4F9CH2C(O)O2NO2, C4F9C(O)O2NO2, and COF2. In contrast to experiments conducted in the absence of NOx, there was no evidence (",
author = "Andersen, {Mads Peter Sulb{\ae}k} and Nielsen, {Ole John} and Hurley, {M. D.} and Ball, {J. C.} and Wallington, {T. J.} and Ellis, {D. A.} and Martin, {J. W.} and Mabury, {S. A.}",
year = "2005",
doi = "10.1021/jp045672g",
language = "English",
volume = "109",
pages = "1849--1856",
journal = "Journal of Physical Chemistry Part A: Molecules, Spectroscopy, Kinetics, Environment and General Theory",
issn = "1089-5639",
publisher = "American Chemical Society",
number = "9",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Atmospheric chemistry of 4:2 fluorotelomer alcohol (n-C4F9CH2CH2OH)

T2 - products and mechanism of Cl atom initiated oxidation in the presence of NOx

AU - Andersen, Mads Peter Sulbæk

AU - Nielsen, Ole John

AU - Hurley, M. D.

AU - Ball, J. C.

AU - Wallington, T. J.

AU - Ellis, D. A.

AU - Martin, J. W.

AU - Mabury, S. A.

PY - 2005

Y1 - 2005

N2 - Smog chamber/FTIR techniques were used to study the Cl atom initiated oxidation of 4:2 fluorotelomer alcohol (C4F9CH2CH2OH, 4:2 FTOH) in the presence of NOx in 700 Torr of N-2/O-2 diluent at 296 K. Chemical activation effects play an important role in the atmospheric chemistry of the peroxy, and possibly the alkoxy, radicals derived from 4:2 FTOH. Cl atoms react with C4F9CH2CH2OH to give C4F9CH2C.HOH radicals which add O-2 to give chemically activated alpha-hydroxyperoxy radicals, [C4F9CH2C(OO.)HOH]*. In 700 Torr of N-2/ O-2 at 296 K, approximately 50% of the [C4F9CH2C(OO.)HOH]* radicals decompose ``promptly'' to give HO2 radicals and C4F9CH2CHO, the remaining [C4F9CH2C(OO.)HOH]* radicals undergo collisional deactivation to give thermalized peroxy radicals, C4F9CH2C(OO.)HOH. Decomposition to HO2 and C4F9CH2CHO is the dominant atmospheric fate of the thermalized peroxy radicals. In the presence of excess NO, the thermalized peroxy radicals react to give C4F9CH2C(O-.)HOH radicals which then decompose at a rate >2.5 x 10(6) s(-1) to give HC(O)OH and the alkyl radical C4F9CH2.. The primary products of 4:2 FTOH oxidation in the presence of excess NOx are C4F9CH2CHO, C4F9CHO, and HCOOH. Secondary products include C4F9CH2C(O)O2NO2, C4F9C(O)O2NO2, and COF2. In contrast to experiments conducted in the absence of NOx, there was no evidence (

AB - Smog chamber/FTIR techniques were used to study the Cl atom initiated oxidation of 4:2 fluorotelomer alcohol (C4F9CH2CH2OH, 4:2 FTOH) in the presence of NOx in 700 Torr of N-2/O-2 diluent at 296 K. Chemical activation effects play an important role in the atmospheric chemistry of the peroxy, and possibly the alkoxy, radicals derived from 4:2 FTOH. Cl atoms react with C4F9CH2CH2OH to give C4F9CH2C.HOH radicals which add O-2 to give chemically activated alpha-hydroxyperoxy radicals, [C4F9CH2C(OO.)HOH]*. In 700 Torr of N-2/ O-2 at 296 K, approximately 50% of the [C4F9CH2C(OO.)HOH]* radicals decompose ``promptly'' to give HO2 radicals and C4F9CH2CHO, the remaining [C4F9CH2C(OO.)HOH]* radicals undergo collisional deactivation to give thermalized peroxy radicals, C4F9CH2C(OO.)HOH. Decomposition to HO2 and C4F9CH2CHO is the dominant atmospheric fate of the thermalized peroxy radicals. In the presence of excess NO, the thermalized peroxy radicals react to give C4F9CH2C(O-.)HOH radicals which then decompose at a rate >2.5 x 10(6) s(-1) to give HC(O)OH and the alkyl radical C4F9CH2.. The primary products of 4:2 FTOH oxidation in the presence of excess NOx are C4F9CH2CHO, C4F9CHO, and HCOOH. Secondary products include C4F9CH2C(O)O2NO2, C4F9C(O)O2NO2, and COF2. In contrast to experiments conducted in the absence of NOx, there was no evidence (

U2 - 10.1021/jp045672g

DO - 10.1021/jp045672g

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 16833516

VL - 109

SP - 1849

EP - 1856

JO - Journal of Physical Chemistry Part A: Molecules, Spectroscopy, Kinetics, Environment and General Theory

JF - Journal of Physical Chemistry Part A: Molecules, Spectroscopy, Kinetics, Environment and General Theory

SN - 1089-5639

IS - 9

ER -

ID: 44568634