The formation of secondary organic aerosol (SOA) by reaction of ozone with monoterpenes (beta-pinene, delta3-carene, limonene, and sabinene) was studied on a short time scale of 3-22 s with a flow tube reactor. Online chemical analysis was performed with the Photoionization Aerosol Mass Spectrometer (PIAMS) to obtain molecular composition and the Nanoaerosol Mass Spectrometer (NAMS) to obtain elemental composition. Molecular composition data showed that dimers and higher order oligomers are formed within seconds after the onset of reaction, indicating that there is no intrinsic kinetic barrier to oligomer formation. Because oligomer formation is fast, it is unlikely that a large number of steps are involved in their formation. Therefore, ion distributions in the PIAMS spectra were interpreted through reactions of intermediates postulated in previous studies with monomer end products or other intermediates. Based on ion signal intensities in the mass spectra, organic peroxides appear to comprise a greater fraction of the aerosol than secondary ozonides. This conclusion is supported by elemental composition data from NAMS that gave C:O ratios in the 2.2-2.7 range.
A flow-tube reactor was used to study the formation of particles from alpha-pinene ozonation. Particle phase products formed within the first 3-22 s of reaction were analyzed online using a scanning mobility particle sizer and two particle mass spectrometers. The first, a photoionization aerosol mass spectrometer (PIAMS), was used to determine the molecular composition of nascent particles between 30 and 50 nm in diameter. The second, a nano-aerosol mass spectrometer (NAMS), was used to determine the elemental composition of individual particles from 50 nm to below 10 nm in diameter. Molecular composition measurements with PIAMS confirm that both the stabilized Criegee intermediate and hydroperoxide channels of alpha-pinene ozonolysis are operative. However, these channels alone cannot explain the high oxygen content of the particles measured with NAMS. The carbon-to-oxygen mole ratios of suspected nucleating agents are in the range of 2.25-4.0, while the measured ratios are from 1.9 for 9 nm particles to 2.5 and 2.7 for 30 and 50 nm particles, respectively. The large oxygen content may arise by cocondensation of small oxygenated molecules such as water or multistep reactions with ozone, water, or other species that produce highly oxygenated macromolecules. In either case, the increasing ratio with increasing particle size suggests that the aerosol becomes less polar with time.
Fine particles of cholesterol were reacted with ozone under pseudo-first-order conditions in an aerosol bag reactor. Gas-phase ozone was monitored using an ozone meter. Particle size distribution functions were determined using a scanning mobility particle sizer, which selected particle sizes for introduction into a photoionization aerosol mass spectrometer (PIAMS). PIAMS was used to determine the concentration of cholesterol in the aerosol as a function of reaction time. Dilution corrected rate coefficients were used to calculate the reactive uptake coefficient for ozone onto cholesterol particles as (2.8 +/- 0.4) x 10(-6). Uptake was found to be independent of particle diameter for the sizes studied (100 and 200 nm), suggesting that the uptake is surface mediated. The reaction products were also collected on filters and analyzed by electrospray ionization (ESI) mass spectrometry with both direct infusion and liquid chromatography sample introduction. The main primary reaction products contained one, two, or three oxygens added to the cholesterol moiety. Secondary oligomeric products were also observed, consisting of covalently bound dimers and trimers. Tandem mass spectrometry was used to confirm the expected structures of these compounds. The dimers appear to be acyl hydroperoxides, consistent with a previously reported mechanism for the reaction in a nonparticipating solvent. Finally, the magnitude of the uptake coefficient confirms that cholesterol is suitable as a local source tracer for source apportionment of ambient organic aerosol.
, Delaware in June 2006. The soft, universal ionization scheme of PIAMS allows for identification of various chemical compounds by a signature ion, often the molecular ion. Meteorological data was used to link some species, such as palmitic and oleic acid, to potential sources; whereas other compounds, like PAHs, have no significant wind dependence. Some classes, including n-alkanes and n-alkanoic acids, are shown to be in abundance during late night/early morning hours, potentially due to the combined effects of temperature inversion, and fresh emissions in a cooler environment. The hightime resolution data shows that rapid concentration changes of a common individual species can be lost with traditional bulk sampling, and a time resolution of 30 minutes is suggested to accurately represent these changes.
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