“…656 A. M. Booth et al: Liquid vapour pressures of cyclic aliphatic dicarboxylic acids Effusion Mass-loss (Riberio da Silva et al, 1999Silva et al, , 2001 and Knudsen Effusion Mass Spectrometry (KEMS) (Booth et al, 2009). They have been previously used to study straight chain (Riberio da Silva et al, 1999;Bilde et al, 2003;Chattopadhyay and Zieman 2005;Zardini et al, 2006;Riipinen et al, 2007;Cappa et al, 2007;Salo et al, 2010;Pope et al, 2010;Soonsin et al, 2010), branched (Riberio da Silva et al, 2001;Mønster et al, 2004;Booth et al, 2010), cyclic (Bilde and Pandis, 2001) and substituted (Chattopadhyay and Zieman 2005;Froesch 2010, Booth et al, 2010) dicarboxylic acids which have been identified in the atmosphere (Hallquist et al, 2009;Kawamura et al, 1996;Sempere and Kawamura, 1994;Gao et al, 2004;Kawamura et al, 2005) as likely products of VOC oxidation. These dicarboxylic acids are solids at room temperature and pressure; however, current gas/particle partitioning models use the sub-cooled liquid reference state, as do activity models (Booth et al, 2010;Riipinen et al, 2007).…”