Direct Evidence of Atmospheric Secondary Organic Aerosol Formation in Forest Atmosphere through Heteromolecular Nucleation

Atmospheric aerosols play a central role in climate and atmospheric chemistry. Organic matter frequently composes aerosol major fraction over continental areas. Reactions of natural volatile organic compounds, with atmospheric oxidants, are a key formation pathway of fine particles. The gas and part...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental science & technology 2002-12, Vol.36 (23), p.5083-5091
Hauptverfasser: Kavouras, Ilias G, Stephanou, Euripides G
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Atmospheric aerosols play a central role in climate and atmospheric chemistry. Organic matter frequently composes aerosol major fraction over continental areas. Reactions of natural volatile organic compounds, with atmospheric oxidants, are a key formation pathway of fine particles. The gas and particle atmospheric concentration of organic compounds directly emitted from conifer leaf epicuticular wax and of those formed through the photooxidation of α- and β-pinene were simultaneously collected and measured in a conifer forest by using elaborated sampling and GC/MS techniques. The saturation concentrations of acidic and carbonyl photooxidation products were estimated, by taking into consideration primary gas- and particle-phase organic species. Primary organic aerosol components represented an important fraction of the atmospheric gas-phase organic content. Consequently, saturation concentrations of photooxidation products have been lowered facilitating new particle formation between molecules of photooxidation products and semi-volatile organic compounds. From the measured concentrations of the above-mentioned compounds, saturation concentrations (C sat,i ) of α- and β-pinene photooxidation products were calculated for nonideal conditions using a previously developed absorptive model. The results of these calculations indicated that primarily emitted organic species and ambient temperature play a crucial role in secondary organic aerosol formation.
ISSN:0013-936X
1520-5851
DOI:10.1021/es025811c