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Secondary organic aerosol reduced by mixture of atmospheric vapours

Authors :
Juergen Wildt
Einhard Kleist
Sungah Kang
M. Rami Alfarra
Michael Le Breton
Joel A. Thornton
Robert Bergström
Mikael Ehn
Iida Pullinen
Defeng Zhao
Thomas J. Bannan
Thomas F. Mentel
Gordon McFiggans
Monika Springer
Sebastian Schmitt
Carl J. Percival
Cheng Wu
Åsa M. Hallquist
Michael Priestley
Astrid Kiendler-Scharr
Michael E. Jenkin
David Simpson
Mattias Hallquist
Ralf Tillmann
Cameron Faxon
David Topping
Institute for Atmospheric and Earth System Research (INAR)
INAR Physics
Source :
Nature, Mcfiggans, G, Mentel, T F, Wildt, J, Pullinen, I, Kang, S, Kleist, E, Schmitt, S, Springer, M, Tillman, R, Wu, C, Zhao, D, Hallquist, M, Faxon, C, Breton, M L, Hallquist, Å M, Simpson, D, Bergström, R, Jenkin, M E, Ehn, M, Thornton, J A, Alfarra, M R, Bannan, T, Percival, C J, Priestley, M, Topping, D & Kiendler-Scharr, A 2019, ' Secondary organic aerosol reduced by mixture of atmospheric vapours ', Nature, vol. 565, pp. 587–593 . https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-018-0871-y
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2019.

Abstract

Secondary organic aerosol contributes to the atmospheric particle burden with implications for air quality and climate. Biogenic volatile organic compounds such as terpenoids emitted from plants are important secondary organic aerosol precursors with isoprene dominating the emissions of biogenic volatile organic compounds globally. However, the particle mass from isoprene oxidation is generally modest compared to that of other terpenoids. Here we show that isoprene, carbon monoxide and methane can each suppress the instantaneous mass and the overall mass yield derived from monoterpenes in mixtures of atmospheric vapours. We find that isoprene ‘scavenges’ hydroxyl radicals, preventing their reaction with monoterpenes, and the resulting isoprene peroxy radicals scavenge highly oxygenated monoterpene products. These effects reduce the yield of low-volatility products that would otherwise form secondary organic aerosol. Global model calculations indicate that oxidant and product scavenging can operate effectively in the real atmosphere. Thus highly reactive compounds (such as isoprene) that produce a modest amount of aerosol are not necessarily net producers of secondary organic particle mass and their oxidation in mixtures of atmospheric vapours can suppress both particle number and mass of secondary organic aerosol. We suggest that formation mechanisms of secondary organic aerosol in the atmosphere need to be considered more realistically, accounting for mechanistic interactions between the products of oxidizing precursor molecules (as is recognized to be necessary when modelling ozone production). Adding reactive gases such as isoprene to mixtures lowers the production of secondary organic aerosol in the atmosphere, thus reducing the atmospheric particulate burden, with implications for human health and climate.

Details

ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
565
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4a4788f1db09fe2ade59c943877bef22
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-018-0871-y