Chemical mechanisms for the production of secondary organic material (SOM) are developed in focused laboratory studies but widely used in the complex modeling
context of the atmosphere. Given this extrapolation, a stringent testing of the mechanisms is important. In addition to particle mass yield as a typical standard for model-measurement comparison, particle composition expressed as O:C and H:C
elemental ratios can serve as a higher dimensional constraint. A paradigm for doing so is developed herein for SOM production from a C5 C10 C15 terpene sequence, namely isoprene, R-pinene, and ß-caryopyhllene. The model MCM-SIMPOL is introduced based on the Master Chemical Mechanism (MCM v3.2) and a group contribution method for vapor pressures (SIMPOL). The O:C and H:C ratios of the SOM are measured using an Aerosol Mass Spectrometer (AMS). Detailed SOM-specific AMS calibrations for the organic contribution to the H2Oþ and COþ ions indicate that published O:C and H:C ratios for SOM are systematically too low. Overall, the measurement-model gap was small for particle mass yield but significant for particle-average elemental composition. The implication is that a key chemical pathway is missing from the chemical mechanism. The data can be explained by the particle-phase homolytic decomposition of organic hydroperoxides and subsequent alkyl-radical-promoted oligomerization.
Revised: May 27, 2011 |
Published: May 11, 2011
Citation
Chen Q., Y. Liu, N.M. Donahue, J.E. Shilling, S.T. Martin, and S.T. Martin. 2011.Particle-Phase Chemistry of Secondary Organic Material: Modeled Compared to Measured O:C and H:C Elemental Ratios Provide Constraints.Environmental Science & Technology 45, no. 11:4763–4770.PNNL-SA-76799.doi:10.1021/es104398s