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Nitrate radical generation via continuous generation of dinitrogen pentoxide in a laminar flow reactor coupled to an oxidation flow reactor

Authors :
A. T. Lambe
E. C. Wood
J. E. Krechmer
F. Majluf
L. R. Williams
P. L. Croteau
M. Cirtog
A. Féron
J.-E. Petit
A. Albinet
J. L. Jimenez
Z. Peng
Source :
Atmospheric Measurement Techniques, Vol 13, Pp 2397-2411 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Copernicus Publications, 2020.

Abstract

Oxidation flow reactors (OFRs) are an emerging tool for studying the formation and oxidative aging of organic aerosols and other applications. The majority of OFR studies to date have involved the generation of the hydroxyl radical (OH) to mimic daytime oxidative aging processes. In contrast, the use of the nitrate radical (NO3) in modern OFRs to mimic nighttime oxidative aging processes has been limited due to the complexity of conventional techniques that are used to generate NO3. Here, we present a new method that uses a laminar flow reactor (LFR) to continuously generate dinitrogen pentoxide (N2O5) in the gas phase at room temperature from the NO2 + O3 and NO2 + NO3 reactions. The N2O5 is then injected into a dark Potential Aerosol Mass (PAM) OFR and decomposes to generate NO3; hereafter, this method is referred to as “OFR-iN2O5” (where “i” stands for “injected”). To assess the applicability of the OFR-iN2O5 method towards different chemical systems, we present experimental and model characterization of the integrated NO3 exposure, NO3:O3, NO2:NO3, and NO2:O2 as a function of LFR and OFR conditions. These parameters were used to investigate the fate of representative organic peroxy radicals (RO2) and aromatic alkyl radicals generated from volatile organic compound (VOC) + NO3 reactions, and VOCs that are reactive towards both O3 and NO3. Finally, we demonstrate the OFR-iN2O5 method by generating and characterizing secondary organic aerosol from the β-pinene + NO3 reaction.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18671381 and 18678548
Volume :
13
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Atmospheric Measurement Techniques
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.0db3fc8663a0431da17ca92ce23445eb
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-13-2397-2020