6533b822fe1ef96bd127d920
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Radical Formation by Fine Particulate Matter Associated with Highly Oxygenated Molecules
Ulrich PöschlFlorian DitasIvan KourtchevCarlos Itsuo YamamotoFobang LiuFobang LiuHaijie TongFrancis D. PopeTing WangTing WangFangxia ShenMeinrat O. AndreaeMeinrat O. AndreaeChristopher PöhlkerChenpei LiChenpei LiAlexander FilippiRicardo H. M. GodoiPingqing FuYueshe WangHelmi KeskinenYun ZhangThorsten HoffmannPaulo ArtaxoJanne LevulaTuukka PetäjäMaosheng YaoKai WangHang SuMarkus KalbererMarkus KalbererRodrigo Augusto Ferreira De SouzaYafang ChengMarkku KulmalaThomas BerkemeierDenis LepplaAndrea M. ArangioAndrea M. ArangioScot T. MartinRu-jin HuangManabu Shiraiwasubject
ChinaFine particulateoxidationRadicalvolatility010501 environmental sciences01 natural scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundEnvironmental ChemistryMoleculemultiphase chemistryChemical compositionRelative species abundanceFinlandIsoprene0105 earth and related environmental sciencesNaphthaleneAerosolsAir Pollutantsmechanismshydroxyl radicalsGeneral Chemistry15. Life on landParticulateschemistry13. Climate actionBeijingEnvironmental chemistryupper troposphereoxidized moleculesmassParticulate Matterchemical-compositionsecondary organic aerosolAEROSSOLdescription
Highly oxygenated molecules (HOMs) play an important role in the formation and evolution of secondary organic aerosols (SOA). However, the abundance of HOMs in different environments and their relation to the oxidative potential of fine particulate matter (PM) are largely unknown. Here, we investigated the relative HOM abundance and radical yield of laboratory-generated SOA and fine PM in ambient air ranging from remote forest areas to highly polluted megacities. By electron paramagnetic resonance and mass spectrometric investigations, we found that the relative abundance of HOMs, especially the dimeric and low-volatility types, in ambient fine PM was positively correlated with the formation of radicals in aqueous PM extracts. SOA from photooxidation of isoprene, ozonolysis of alpha- and beta-pinene, and fine PM from tropical (central Amazon) and boreal (Hyytiala, Finland) forests exhibited a higher HOM abundance and radical yield than SOA from photooxidation of naphthalene and fine PM from urban sites (Beijing, Guangzhou, Mainz, Shanghai, and Xian), confirming that HOMs are important constituents of biogenic SOA to generate radicals. Our study provides new insights into the chemical relationship of HOM abundance, composition, and sources with the yield of radicals by laboratory and ambient aerosols, enabling better quantification of the component-specific contribution of source- or site-specific fine PM to its climate and health effects.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2019-09-19 |