Secondary organic aerosol (SOA) particles are formed in the atmosphere from condensable oxidation products of anthropogenic and biogenic volatile organic compounds (VOCs). On a global scale, biogenic VOCs account for about 90% of VOC emissions and of SOA formation (90 billion kilograms of carbon per year). SOA particles can scatter radiation and act as cloud condensation or ice nuclei, and thereby influence the Earth's radiation balance and climate. They consist of a myriad of different compounds with varying physicochemical properties, and little information is available on the phase state of SOA particles. Gas-particle partitioning models usually assume that SOA particles are liquid, but here we present experimental evidence that they can be solid under ambient conditions. We investigated biogenic SOA particles formed from oxidation products of VOCs in plant chamber experiments and in boreal forests within a few hours after atmospheric nucleation events. On the basis of observed particle bouncing in an aerosol impactor and of electron microscopy we conclude that biogenic SOA particles can adopt an amorphous solid-most probably glassy-state. This amorphous solid state should provoke a rethinking of SOA processes because it may influence the partitioning of semi-volatile compounds, reduce the rate of heterogeneous chemical reactions, affect the particles' ability to accommodate water and act as cloud condensation or ice nuclei, and change the atmospheric lifetime of the particles. Thus, the results of this study challenge traditional views of the kinetics and thermodynamics of SOA formation and transformation in the atmosphere and their implications for air quality and climate.
The formation of new atmospheric particles with diameters of 3-10 nm has been observed at a variety of altitudes and locations. Such aerosol particles have the potential to grow into cloud condensation nuclei, thus affecting cloud formation as well as the global radiation budget. In some cases, the observed formation rates of new particles have been adequately explained by binary nucleation, involving water and sulphuric acid, but in certain locations--particularly those within the marine boundary layer and at continental sites--observed ambient nucleation rates exceed those predicted by the binary scheme. In these locations, ambient sulphuric acid (H2SO4) levels are typically lower than required for binary nucleation, but are sufficient for ternary nucleation (sulphuric acid-ammonia-water). Here we present results from an aerosol dynamics model with a ternary nucleation scheme which indicate that nucleation in the troposphere should be ubiquitous, and yield a reservoir of thermodynamically stable clusters 1-3 nm in size. We suggest that the growth of these clusters to a detectable size (> 3 nm particle diameter) is restricted by the availability of condensable vapour. Observations of atmospheric particle formation and growth from a continental and a coastal site support this hypothesis, indicating that a growth process including ternary nucleation is likely to be responsible for the formation of cloud condensation nuclei.
Taking advantage of only the measured aerosol particles spectral evolution as a function of time, a new analytical tool is developed to derive formation and growth properties of nucleation mode aerosols. This method, when used with hygroscopic growth-factors, can also estimate basic composition properties of these recently-formed particles. From size spectra the diameter growth-rate can be obtained, and aerosol condensation and coagulation sinks can be calculated. Using this growth-rate and condensation sink, the concentration of condensable vapours and their source rate can be estimated. Then, combining the coagulation sink together with measured number concentrations and apparent source rates of 3 nm particles, 1 nm particle nucleation rates and concentration can be estimated. To estimate nucleation rates and vapour concentration source rates producing new particle bursts over the Boreal forest regions, three cases from the BIOFOR project were examined using this analytical tool. In this environment, the nucleation mode growth-rate was observed to be 2-3 nm hour−1, which required a condensable vapour concentration of 2.5-4×107 cm−3 and a source rate of approximately 7.5-11×104 cm−3 s−1 to be sustained. The formation rate of 3 nm particles was #1 particle cm−3 s−1 in all three cases. The estimated formation rate of 1 nm particles was 10-100 particles cm−3 s−1, while their concentration was estimated to be between 10,000 and 100,000 particles cm−3. Using hygroscopicity data and mass flux expressions, the mass flux of insoluble vapour is estimated to be of the same order of magnitude as that of soluble vapour, with a soluble to insoluble vapour flux ratio ranging from 0.7 to 1.4 during these nucleation events.
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