Nitrogen (N)-containing organic compounds,
including “brown
carbon” (BrC), represent an important fraction of organic aerosols.
However, little is known about the processes of formation of the secondarily
formed N-containing organics in the atmosphere. Here, we investigated
the formation of gas-phase organic compounds, including N-containing
organics, through interfacial oxidation chemistry of gaseous O3 with an authentic riverine surface microlayer (SML) by using
a high-resolution quadrupole Orbitrap mass spectrometer coupled to
a commercial secondary electrospray ionization source. The resulting
hierarchical cluster diagram obtained for real-time observation for
60 min shows the occurrence of 677 ions in positive mode. The level
of N-containing organics, including BrC compounds (e.g., imidazoles),
formed during the heterogeneous processing of O3 on the
SML in the dark and under ultraviolet–visible light irradiation,
was on average 20.7% among all samples. Many of the detected N-containing
compounds comprise a CN bond, suggesting that they are potentially
toxic compounds that also affect urban air quality. Overall, this
study provides evidence that interfacial ozone oxidation chemistry
at the riverine SML plays an important role as an additional source
of air pollution in urban environments, which can affect both human
health and the absorption properties of urban aerosols.