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« Previous AbstractImproved exposure estimation in soil screening and cleanup criteria for volatile organic chemicals    Next AbstractChemistry of Secondary Organic Aerosol Formation from Reactions of Monoterpenes with OH Radicals in the Presence of NO(x) »

J Phys Chem A


Title:Gas- and Particle-Phase Products and Their Mechanisms of Formation from the Reaction of Delta-3-Carene with NO(3) Radicals
Author(s):DeVault MP; Ziemann PJ;
Address:"Department of Chemistry, University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, Colorado 80309, United States. Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES), Boulder, Colorado 80309, United States"
Journal Title:J Phys Chem A
Year:2021
Volume:20211118
Issue:47
Page Number:10207 - 10222
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpca.1c07763
ISSN/ISBN:1520-5215 (Electronic) 1089-5639 (Linking)
Abstract:"Monoterpenes are a major component of the large quantities of biogenic volatile organic compounds that are emitted to the atmosphere each year. They have a variety of structures, which influences their subsequent reactions with OH radicals, O(3), or NO(3) radicals and the tendency for these reactions to form secondary organic aerosol (SOA). Here we report the results of an environmental chamber study of the reaction of Delta-3-carene, an abundant unsaturated C(10) bicyclic monoterpene, with NO(3) radicals, a major nighttime oxidant. Gas- and particle-phase reaction products were analyzed in real time and offline by using mass spectrometry, gas and liquid chromatography, infrared spectroscopy, and derivatization-spectrophotometric methods. The results were used to identify and quantify functional groups and molecular products and to develop gas- and particle-phase reaction mechanisms to explain their formation. Identified gas-phase products were all first-generation ring-retaining and ring-opened compounds (ten C(10) and one C(9) monomers) with 2-4 functional groups and one C(20) dinitrooxydialkyl peroxide dimer. Upon partitioning to the particle phase, the monomers reacted further to form oligomers consisting almost entirely of C(20) acetal and hemiacetal dimers, with those formed from a hydroxynitrate and hydroxycarbonyl nitrate comprising more than 50% of the SOA mass. The SOA contained an average of 0.94, 0.71, 0.15, 0.11, 0.16, 0.13, and 7.80 nitrate, carbonyl, hydroxyl, carboxyl, ester, peroxide, and methylene groups per C(10) monomer and was formed with a mass yield of 56%. These results have important similarities and differences to those obtained from a previous similar study of the reaction of beta-pinene and yield new insights into the effects of monoterpene structure on gas- and particle-phase reactions that can lead to the formation of a large variety of multifunctional products and significant amounts of SOA"
Keywords:
Notes:"PubMed-not-MEDLINEDeVault, Marla P Ziemann, Paul J eng 2021/11/19 J Phys Chem A. 2021 Dec 2; 125(47):10207-10222. doi: 10.1021/acs.jpca.1c07763. Epub 2021 Nov 18"

 
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