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A reference data set for validating vapor pressure measurement techniques: homologous series of polyethylene glycols

Authors :
U. K. Krieger
F. Siegrist
C. Marcolli
E. U. Emanuelsson
F. M. Gøbel
M. Bilde
A. Marsh
J. P. Reid
A. J. Huisman
I. Riipinen
N. Hyttinen
N. Myllys
T. Kurtén
T. Bannan
C. J. Percival
D. Topping
Source :
Atmospheric Measurement Techniques, Vol 11, Pp 49-63 (2018)
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Copernicus Publications, 2018.

Abstract

To predict atmospheric partitioning of organic compounds between gas and aerosol particle phase based on explicit models for gas phase chemistry, saturation vapor pressures of the compounds need to be estimated. Estimation methods based on functional group contributions require training sets of compounds with well-established saturation vapor pressures. However, vapor pressures of semivolatile and low-volatility organic molecules at atmospheric temperatures reported in the literature often differ by several orders of magnitude between measurement techniques. These discrepancies exceed the stated uncertainty of each technique which is generally reported to be smaller than a factor of 2. At present, there is no general reference technique for measuring saturation vapor pressures of atmospherically relevant compounds with low vapor pressures at atmospheric temperatures. To address this problem, we measured vapor pressures with different techniques over a wide temperature range for intercomparison and to establish a reliable training set. We determined saturation vapor pressures for the homologous series of polyethylene glycols (H − (O − CH2 − CH2)n − OH) for n = 3 to n = 8 ranging in vapor pressure at 298 K from 10−7 to 5×10−2 Pa and compare them with quantum chemistry calculations. Such a homologous series provides a reference set that covers several orders of magnitude in saturation vapor pressure, allowing a critical assessment of the lower limits of detection of vapor pressures for the different techniques as well as permitting the identification of potential sources of systematic error. Also, internal consistency within the series allows outlying data to be rejected more easily. Most of the measured vapor pressures agreed within the stated uncertainty range. Deviations mostly occurred for vapor pressure values approaching the lower detection limit of a technique. The good agreement between the measurement techniques (some of which are sensitive to the mass accommodation coefficient and some not) suggests that the mass accommodation coefficients of the studied compounds are close to unity. The quantum chemistry calculations were about 1 order of magnitude higher than the measurements. We find that extrapolation of vapor pressures from elevated to atmospheric temperatures is permissible over a range of about 100 K for these compounds, suggesting that measurements should be performed best at temperatures yielding the highest-accuracy data, allowing subsequent extrapolation to atmospheric temperatures.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18671381 and 18678548
Volume :
11
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Atmospheric Measurement Techniques
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.fc8b68ba36ac41c8b9ea36934c9a605a
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-11-49-2018