April 7, 2017
Journal Article

Isomerization of second generation isoprene peroxy radicals: epoxide formation and implications for secondary organic aerosol yields

Abstract

We report chamber measurements of secondary organic aerosol (SOA) formation from isoprene photochemical oxidation, where radical concentrations were systematically varied and the molecular composition of semi to low volatility gases and SOA were measured online. Using a detailed chemical mechanism, we find that to explain the behavior of low volatility products and SOA mass yields relative to input H2O2 concentrations, the second generation dihydroxy hydroperoxy peroxy radical (C5H11O6•) must undergo an intra-molecular H-shift with a net forward rate constant of order 0.1 s-1 or higher, consistent with quantum chemical calculations which suggest a net forward rate constant of 0.3-0.9 s-1. Furthermore, these calculations suggest the dominant product of this isomerization is a dihydroxy hydroperoxy epoxide (C5H10O5) which is expected to have a saturation vapor pressure ~2 orders of magnitude higher than the dihydroxy dihydroperoxide, ISOP(OOH)2 (C5H12O6), a major product of the peroxy radical reacting with HO2. These results provide strong constraints on the likely volatility distribution of isoprene oxidation products under atmospheric conditions and thus on the importance of non-reactive gas-particle partitioning of isoprene oxidation products as an SOA source.

Revised: May 9, 2017 | Published: April 7, 2017

Citation

D'Ambro E., K.H. Moller, F.D. Lopez-Hilfiker, S. Schobesberger, J. Liu, J.E. Shilling, and B.H. Lee, et al. 2017. Isomerization of second generation isoprene peroxy radicals: epoxide formation and implications for secondary organic aerosol yields. Environmental Science & Technology 51, no. 9:4978-4987. PNNL-SA-123725. doi:10.1021/acs.est.7b00460