Chemical and isotopic composition of secondary organic aerosol generated by α-pinene ozonolysis

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Chemical and isotopic composition of secondary organic aerosol generated by α-pinene ozonolysis. / Meusinger, Carl; Dusek, Ulrike; King, Stephanie Michelle; Holzinger, Rupert; Rosenørn, Thomas; Sperlich, Peter; Julien, Maxime; Remaud, Gerald S.; Bilde, Merete; Röckmann, Thomas; Johnson, Matthew Stanley.

I: Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, Bind 17, Nr. 10, 2017, s. 6373-6391.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Meusinger, C, Dusek, U, King, SM, Holzinger, R, Rosenørn, T, Sperlich, P, Julien, M, Remaud, GS, Bilde, M, Röckmann, T & Johnson, MS 2017, 'Chemical and isotopic composition of secondary organic aerosol generated by α-pinene ozonolysis', Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, bind 17, nr. 10, s. 6373-6391. https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-17-6373-2017

APA

Meusinger, C., Dusek, U., King, S. M., Holzinger, R., Rosenørn, T., Sperlich, P., Julien, M., Remaud, G. S., Bilde, M., Röckmann, T., & Johnson, M. S. (2017). Chemical and isotopic composition of secondary organic aerosol generated by α-pinene ozonolysis. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 17(10), 6373-6391. https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-17-6373-2017

Vancouver

Meusinger C, Dusek U, King SM, Holzinger R, Rosenørn T, Sperlich P o.a. Chemical and isotopic composition of secondary organic aerosol generated by α-pinene ozonolysis. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics. 2017;17(10):6373-6391. https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-17-6373-2017

Author

Meusinger, Carl ; Dusek, Ulrike ; King, Stephanie Michelle ; Holzinger, Rupert ; Rosenørn, Thomas ; Sperlich, Peter ; Julien, Maxime ; Remaud, Gerald S. ; Bilde, Merete ; Röckmann, Thomas ; Johnson, Matthew Stanley. / Chemical and isotopic composition of secondary organic aerosol generated by α-pinene ozonolysis. I: Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics. 2017 ; Bind 17, Nr. 10. s. 6373-6391.

Bibtex

@article{0c2894d2cf804603928af2d8d7d5fd2c,
title = "Chemical and isotopic composition of secondary organic aerosol generated by α-pinene ozonolysis",
abstract = "Secondary organic aerosol (SOA) plays a central role in air pollution and climate. However, the description of the sources and mechanisms leading to SOA is elusive despite decades of research. While stable isotope analysis is increasingly used to constrain sources of ambient aerosol, in many cases it is difficult to apply because neither the isotopic composition of aerosol precursors nor the fractionation of aerosol forming processes is well characterised. In this paper, SOA formation from ozonolysis of α-pinene - an important precursor and perhaps the best-known model system used in laboratory studies - was investigated using position-dependent and average determinations of 13C in α-pinene and advanced analysis of reaction products using thermal-desorption proton-transfer-reaction mass spectrometry (PTR-MS). The total carbon (TC) isotopic composition δ13C of the initial α-pinene was measured, and the δ13C of the specific carbon atom sites was determined using positionspecific isotope analysis (PSIA). The PSIA analysis showed variations at individual positions from -6.9 to +10:5% relative to the bulk composition. SOA was formed from α-pinene and ozone in a constant-flow chamber under dark, dry, and low-NOx conditions, with OH scavengers and in the absence of seed particles. The excess of ozone and long residence time in the flow chamber ensured that virtually all α-pinene had reacted. Product SOA was collected on two sequential quartz filters. The filters were analysed offline by heating them stepwise from 100 to 400 °C to desorb organic compounds that were (i) detected using PTR-MS for chemical analysis and to determine the O: C ratio, and (ii) converted to CO2 for 13C analysis. More than 400 ions in the mass range 39-800 Da were detected from the desorbed material and quantified using a PTR-MS. The largest amount desorbed at 150 °C. The O: C ratio of material from the front filter increased from 0.18 to 0.25 as the desorption temperature was raised from 100 to 250 °C. At temperatures above 250 °C, the O: C ratio of thermally desorbed material, presumably from oligomeric precursors, was constant. The observation of a number of components that occurred across the full range of desorption temperatures suggests that they are generated by thermal decomposition of oligomers. The isotopic composition of SOA was more or less independent of desorption temperature above 100 °C. TC analysis showed that SOA was enriched in 13C by 0.6-1.2% relative to the initial α-pinene. According to mass balance, gas-phase products will be depleted relative to the initial α-pinene. Accordingly, organic material on the back filters, which contain adsorbed gas-phase compounds, is depleted in 13C in TC by 0.7% relative to the initial α-pinene, and by 1.3% compared to SOA collected on the front filter. The observed difference in 13C between the gas and particle phases may arise from isotope-dependent changes in the branching ratios in the α-pinene + O3 reaction. Alternatively, some gasphase products involve carbon atoms from highly enriched and depleted sites, as shown in the PSIA analysis, giving a non-kinetic origin to the observed fractionations. In either case, the present study suggests that the site-specific distribution of 13C in the source material itself governs the abundance of 13C in SOA.",
author = "Carl Meusinger and Ulrike Dusek and King, {Stephanie Michelle} and Rupert Holzinger and Thomas Rosen{\o}rn and Peter Sperlich and Maxime Julien and Remaud, {Gerald S.} and Merete Bilde and Thomas R{\"o}ckmann and Johnson, {Matthew Stanley}",
year = "2017",
doi = "10.5194/acp-17-6373-2017",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
pages = "6373--6391",
journal = "Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics",
issn = "1680-7316",
publisher = "Copernicus GmbH",
number = "10",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Chemical and isotopic composition of secondary organic aerosol generated by α-pinene ozonolysis

AU - Meusinger, Carl

AU - Dusek, Ulrike

AU - King, Stephanie Michelle

AU - Holzinger, Rupert

AU - Rosenørn, Thomas

AU - Sperlich, Peter

AU - Julien, Maxime

AU - Remaud, Gerald S.

AU - Bilde, Merete

AU - Röckmann, Thomas

AU - Johnson, Matthew Stanley

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - Secondary organic aerosol (SOA) plays a central role in air pollution and climate. However, the description of the sources and mechanisms leading to SOA is elusive despite decades of research. While stable isotope analysis is increasingly used to constrain sources of ambient aerosol, in many cases it is difficult to apply because neither the isotopic composition of aerosol precursors nor the fractionation of aerosol forming processes is well characterised. In this paper, SOA formation from ozonolysis of α-pinene - an important precursor and perhaps the best-known model system used in laboratory studies - was investigated using position-dependent and average determinations of 13C in α-pinene and advanced analysis of reaction products using thermal-desorption proton-transfer-reaction mass spectrometry (PTR-MS). The total carbon (TC) isotopic composition δ13C of the initial α-pinene was measured, and the δ13C of the specific carbon atom sites was determined using positionspecific isotope analysis (PSIA). The PSIA analysis showed variations at individual positions from -6.9 to +10:5% relative to the bulk composition. SOA was formed from α-pinene and ozone in a constant-flow chamber under dark, dry, and low-NOx conditions, with OH scavengers and in the absence of seed particles. The excess of ozone and long residence time in the flow chamber ensured that virtually all α-pinene had reacted. Product SOA was collected on two sequential quartz filters. The filters were analysed offline by heating them stepwise from 100 to 400 °C to desorb organic compounds that were (i) detected using PTR-MS for chemical analysis and to determine the O: C ratio, and (ii) converted to CO2 for 13C analysis. More than 400 ions in the mass range 39-800 Da were detected from the desorbed material and quantified using a PTR-MS. The largest amount desorbed at 150 °C. The O: C ratio of material from the front filter increased from 0.18 to 0.25 as the desorption temperature was raised from 100 to 250 °C. At temperatures above 250 °C, the O: C ratio of thermally desorbed material, presumably from oligomeric precursors, was constant. The observation of a number of components that occurred across the full range of desorption temperatures suggests that they are generated by thermal decomposition of oligomers. The isotopic composition of SOA was more or less independent of desorption temperature above 100 °C. TC analysis showed that SOA was enriched in 13C by 0.6-1.2% relative to the initial α-pinene. According to mass balance, gas-phase products will be depleted relative to the initial α-pinene. Accordingly, organic material on the back filters, which contain adsorbed gas-phase compounds, is depleted in 13C in TC by 0.7% relative to the initial α-pinene, and by 1.3% compared to SOA collected on the front filter. The observed difference in 13C between the gas and particle phases may arise from isotope-dependent changes in the branching ratios in the α-pinene + O3 reaction. Alternatively, some gasphase products involve carbon atoms from highly enriched and depleted sites, as shown in the PSIA analysis, giving a non-kinetic origin to the observed fractionations. In either case, the present study suggests that the site-specific distribution of 13C in the source material itself governs the abundance of 13C in SOA.

AB - Secondary organic aerosol (SOA) plays a central role in air pollution and climate. However, the description of the sources and mechanisms leading to SOA is elusive despite decades of research. While stable isotope analysis is increasingly used to constrain sources of ambient aerosol, in many cases it is difficult to apply because neither the isotopic composition of aerosol precursors nor the fractionation of aerosol forming processes is well characterised. In this paper, SOA formation from ozonolysis of α-pinene - an important precursor and perhaps the best-known model system used in laboratory studies - was investigated using position-dependent and average determinations of 13C in α-pinene and advanced analysis of reaction products using thermal-desorption proton-transfer-reaction mass spectrometry (PTR-MS). The total carbon (TC) isotopic composition δ13C of the initial α-pinene was measured, and the δ13C of the specific carbon atom sites was determined using positionspecific isotope analysis (PSIA). The PSIA analysis showed variations at individual positions from -6.9 to +10:5% relative to the bulk composition. SOA was formed from α-pinene and ozone in a constant-flow chamber under dark, dry, and low-NOx conditions, with OH scavengers and in the absence of seed particles. The excess of ozone and long residence time in the flow chamber ensured that virtually all α-pinene had reacted. Product SOA was collected on two sequential quartz filters. The filters were analysed offline by heating them stepwise from 100 to 400 °C to desorb organic compounds that were (i) detected using PTR-MS for chemical analysis and to determine the O: C ratio, and (ii) converted to CO2 for 13C analysis. More than 400 ions in the mass range 39-800 Da were detected from the desorbed material and quantified using a PTR-MS. The largest amount desorbed at 150 °C. The O: C ratio of material from the front filter increased from 0.18 to 0.25 as the desorption temperature was raised from 100 to 250 °C. At temperatures above 250 °C, the O: C ratio of thermally desorbed material, presumably from oligomeric precursors, was constant. The observation of a number of components that occurred across the full range of desorption temperatures suggests that they are generated by thermal decomposition of oligomers. The isotopic composition of SOA was more or less independent of desorption temperature above 100 °C. TC analysis showed that SOA was enriched in 13C by 0.6-1.2% relative to the initial α-pinene. According to mass balance, gas-phase products will be depleted relative to the initial α-pinene. Accordingly, organic material on the back filters, which contain adsorbed gas-phase compounds, is depleted in 13C in TC by 0.7% relative to the initial α-pinene, and by 1.3% compared to SOA collected on the front filter. The observed difference in 13C between the gas and particle phases may arise from isotope-dependent changes in the branching ratios in the α-pinene + O3 reaction. Alternatively, some gasphase products involve carbon atoms from highly enriched and depleted sites, as shown in the PSIA analysis, giving a non-kinetic origin to the observed fractionations. In either case, the present study suggests that the site-specific distribution of 13C in the source material itself governs the abundance of 13C in SOA.

U2 - 10.5194/acp-17-6373-2017

DO - 10.5194/acp-17-6373-2017

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85019979180

VL - 17

SP - 6373

EP - 6391

JO - Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics

JF - Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics

SN - 1680-7316

IS - 10

ER -

ID: 179393964