Atmospheric Chemistry of Volatile Organic Compounds: Oxidation Products, Mechanisms and Secondary Organic Aerosol Formation
Abstract
The results from this work are a piece in understanding the complex puzzle of atmospheric
aerosol formation. Secondary organic aerosol (SOA) formed by the oxidation
of volatile organic compounds (VOC) in the atmosphere is a key component of air
pollution with a strong negative impact on human health and influence on climate,
but its formation is poorly understood. Because air pollution and climate change are
major challenges facing modern societies, there is a clear need to better understand
atmospheric SOA formation. SOA formation can be estimated from distributions of
potential oxidation products, but such estimates are only as useful as the underlying
chemical mechanisms and physical properties on which they are based.
The work presented in this thesis was conducted to better characterize VOC oxidation
products and the chemical mechanisms governing their formation. The SOA
precursor compounds a-pinene and limonene (representing biogenic VOC) and 1,3,5-
trimethylbenzene (TMB) (an anthropogenic VOC) were studied in the G-FROST and
Go:PAM flow reactors to characterize their oxidation and the subsequent SOA-forming
processes. Previously unknown compounds including dimer esters, carboxylic acids,
nitrates and highly oxygenated molecules were identified using state-of-the-art mass
spectrometric methods. These oxidation products were shown to be important SOA
contributors and explicit mechanisms for their formation were proposed. Some of the
identified compounds were suggested to be of extremely low volatility and thus important
for new particle formation. Oxidation of TMB under conditions representative of
urban environments reduced particle formation potential; this effect was attributed to
the disruption of RO2 auto-oxidation cycles by NOx and subsequent nitrate formation
at the expense of highly oxygenated molecules. During the course of this work, an
automated algorithm was developed to extract compound-specific volatility data from
FIGAERO thermograms.
The scientific understanding of SOA formation would be greatly improved by a detailed
knowledge of the products of VOC oxidation, the mechanisms by which they are formed,
and their vapour pressures, all of which this work aims to contribute to.
Parts of work
High-molecular weight dimer esters are major products in aerosols
from -pinene ozonolysis and the boreal forest
Kristensen, K., Watne, Å. K., Hammes, J., Lutz, A., Petäjä, T., Hallquist, M.,
Bilde, M. and Glasius, M.; Environ. Sci. Technol. Lett., 3 (8), 280–285, 2016; ::doi::10.1021/acs.estlett.6b00152 Characterization of organic nitrate constituents of secondary organic
aerosol (SOA) from nitrate-radical-initiated oxidation of limonene using
High-Resolution Chemical Ionization Mass Spectrometry
Faxon, C., Hammes, J., Pathak, R. K., and Hallquist, M.; Atmos. Chem. Phys.,
18, 5467-5481, 2018; ::doi::10.5194/acp-18-5467-2018 Carboxylic acids from limonene oxidation by ozone and OH radicals:
Insights into mechanisms derived using a FIGAERO-CIMS
Hammes, J., Lutz, A., Mentel, T., Faxon, C. and Hallquist, M.; Atmos. Chem.
Phys. Discuss., in review, 2018; ::doi::10.5194/acp-2018-1004 Effect of NOx on 1,3,5-trimethylbenzene (TMB) oxidation product distribution
and particle formation
Hammes, J., Tsiligiannis, E., Mentel, T. and Hallquist, M.;
Manuscript in preparation, 2018 A method for extracting calibrated volatility information from the
FIGAERO-HR-ToF-CIMS and application to chamber and field work
studies
Bannan, T. J., Le Breton, M., Priestley, M., Worrall S. D., Bacak, A., Marsden,
N., Hammes, J., Hallquist, M., Alfarra R., Krieger U. K., Reid, J., Jayne J.,
Gordon McFiggans, G., Hugh Coe, H., Percival, C. J. and Topping, D.; ::doi::10.5194/amt-2018-255
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Science
Institution
Department of Chemistry and Molecular Biology ; Institutionen för kemi och molekylärbiologi
Disputation
Onsdagen den 6 February 2019, kl 10.00, KB, Kemigården 4
Date of defence
2019-02-06
juliahpunkt@gmail.com
Date
2019-01-15Author
Hammes, Julia
Keywords
SOA
VOC
anthropogenic
biogenic
FIGAERO
CIMS
HOMs
ELVOCs
atmospheric oxidation
chemical mechanism
NOx
limonene
a-pinene
TMB
ozone
nitrate
OH
radical chemistry
RO2
G-FROST
GO:PAM
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-7833-069-0
Language
eng