Effect of industrial alkene ozonolysis on atmospheric H2SO4 formation

This study has employed the master chemical mechanism (MCM) to investigate the influence of the ozone oxidation pathways in the atmospheric formation of H2SO4 from short-chain olefins in industrialized areas. In-situ H2SO4 formation data were obtained using a high-resolution chemical ionization time...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of environmental sciences (China) 2025-04, Vol.150, p.466-476
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Xing, Shi, Xiaowen, Jiang, Youling, Ma, Yan, Zheng, Jun
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creator Wang, Xing
Shi, Xiaowen
Jiang, Youling
Ma, Yan
Zheng, Jun
description This study has employed the master chemical mechanism (MCM) to investigate the influence of the ozone oxidation pathways in the atmospheric formation of H2SO4 from short-chain olefins in industrialized areas. In-situ H2SO4 formation data were obtained using a high-resolution chemical ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometer, and the simulated H2SO4 concentrations calculated using updated parameters for the MCM model exhibited good agreement with observations. In the simulation analysis of different reaction pathways involved in H2SO4 formation, hydroxyl radicals were found to dominate H2SO4 production during the daytime, while olefin ozone oxidation contributed up to 65% of total H2SO4 production during the night-time. A sensitivity analysis of the H2SO4 production parameters has revealed a high sensitivity to changes in sulfur dioxide, and a relatively high sensitivity to olefins with fast ozonolysis reaction rates and bimolecular reaction rates of resulting stabilized Criegee Intermediates. A high relative humidity promotes daytime H2SO4 formation, but has an inhibiting effect during the night-time due to the different dominant reaction pathways.
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In-situ H2SO4 formation data were obtained using a high-resolution chemical ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometer, and the simulated H2SO4 concentrations calculated using updated parameters for the MCM model exhibited good agreement with observations. In the simulation analysis of different reaction pathways involved in H2SO4 formation, hydroxyl radicals were found to dominate H2SO4 production during the daytime, while olefin ozone oxidation contributed up to 65% of total H2SO4 production during the night-time. A sensitivity analysis of the H2SO4 production parameters has revealed a high sensitivity to changes in sulfur dioxide, and a relatively high sensitivity to olefins with fast ozonolysis reaction rates and bimolecular reaction rates of resulting stabilized Criegee Intermediates. 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source ScienceDirect Journals (5 years ago - present); Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Alkene ozonation reaction
Gaseous sulfuric acid
MCM model
Sensitivity analysis
title Effect of industrial alkene ozonolysis on atmospheric H2SO4 formation
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