scholarly journals Supplementary material to "Molecular insights on aging and aqueous phase processing from ambient biomass burning emissions-influenced Po Valley fog and aerosol"

Author(s):  
Matthew Brege ◽  
Marco Paglione ◽  
Stefania Gilardoni ◽  
Stefano Decesari ◽  
Maria Cristina Facchini ◽  
...  
2013 ◽  
Vol 13 (10) ◽  
pp. 27641-27675
Author(s):  
Y. J. Li ◽  
D. D. Huang ◽  
H. Y. Cheung ◽  
A. K. Y. Lee ◽  
C. K. Chan

Abstract. We present here experimental results on aqueous-phase (A) photochemical oxidation (with UV and OH radicals generated from H2O2 photolysis) and (B) direct photolysis (with only UV irradiation) of a methoxy-phenol, vanillin (VL), as a model compound from biomass burning. Both on-line aerosol mass spectrometric (AMS) characterization and off-line chemical analyses were performed. AMS analyses of dried atomized droplets of the bulk reacting mixtures showed that VL almost entirely evaporates during the drying process. Large amounts of organic mass remained in the particle phase after reactions under both conditions. Under condition (A), AMS measured organic mass first increased rapidly and then decreased, attributable to the formation of non-volatile products and subsequent formation of smaller and volatile products, respectively. The oxygen-to-carbon (O:C) ratio of the products reached 1.5 after about 80 min, but dropped substantially thereafter. In contrast, organic mass increased slowly under condition (B). The O:C ratio reached 1.0 after 180 min. In off-line analyses, small oxygenates were detected under condition (A), while hydroxylated products and dimers of VL were detected under condition (B). Particle hygroscopic growth factor (GF) and cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) activity of the reacting mixtures were found to be dependent on both organic volume fraction and the degree of oxygenation of organics. Results show that (1) aqueous-phase processes can lead to the retention of a large portion of the organic mass in the particle phase; (2) once retained, this portion of organic mass significantly changes the hygroscopicity and CCN activity of the aerosol particles; (3) intensive photochemical oxidation gave rise to an O:C ratio as high as 1.5 but the ratio decreased as further oxidation led to smaller and more volatile products; and (4) polymerization occurred with direct photolysis, resulting in high-molecular-weight products of a yellowish color. This study demonstrates that aqueous-phase reactions of a methoxy-phenol can lead to substantial amount of secondary organic aerosol (SOA) formation. Given the vast amount of biomass burning input globally, model representation of either the SOA budget or their subsequent effects would not be adequate if the contribution of SOA formation from aqueous-phase reactions of methoxy-phenols is not considered.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Spiro Jorga ◽  
Kalliopi Florou ◽  
Christos Kaltsonoudis ◽  
John Kodros ◽  
Christina Vasilakopoulou ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mackenzie M. Grieman ◽  
Murat Aydin ◽  
Diedrich Fritzsche ◽  
Joseph R. McConnell ◽  
Thomas Opel ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Amelie Bertrand ◽  
Giulia Stefenelli ◽  
Coty N. Jen ◽  
Simone M. Pieber ◽  
Emily A. Bruns ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lin He ◽  
Erik Hans Hoffmann ◽  
Andreas Tilgner ◽  
Hartmut Herrmann

<p>Biomass burning (BB) is a significant contributor to air pollution on global, regional and local scale with impacts on air quality, public health and climate. Anhydrosugars (levoglucosan, mannosan and galactocan) and methoxyphenols (guaiacol, creosol, etc.) are important tracer compounds emitted through biomass burning. Once emitted, they can undergo complex multiphase chemistry in the atmosphere contributing to secondary organic aerosol formation. However, their chemical multiphase processing is not yet well understood and investigated by models. Therefore, the present study aimed at a better understanding of the multiphase chemistry of these BB trace species by means of detailed model studies with a new developed detailed chemical CAPRAM biomass burning module (CAPRAM-BB). This module was developed based on the kinetic data from the laser flash photolysis measurements in our lab at TROPOS and other literature studies. The developed CAPRAM-BB module includes 2991 reactions (thereof 9 phase transfers and 2982 aqueous-phase reactions). By coupling with the multiphase chemistry mechanism MCMv3.2/CAPRAM4.0 and the extended CAPRAM aromatics (CAPRAM-AM1.0) and halogen modules (CAPRAM-HM3.0), it is being applied for some residential wood burning cases in Europe and wildfire cases in the US. Our model results show that the BB chemistry could significantly affect the budgets of important atmospheric oxidants such as H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub> and HONO, and contribute to the SOA formation especially the fraction of brown carbon and substituted organic acids.</p>


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