Web Release Date: April 26,
Products and Mechanism of Secondary Organic Aerosol Formation from Reactions of Linear Alkenes with NO3 Radicals

and
Air Pollution Research Center, University of California, Riverside, California 92521
Received: January 14, 2005
In Final Form: March 30, 2005
Abstract:
Secondary organic aerosol (SOA) formation from reactions of linear alkenes with NO3 radicals was investigated
in an environmental chamber using a thermal desorption particle beam mass spectrometer for particle analysis.
A general chemical mechanism was developed to explain the formation of the observed SOA products. The
major first-generation SOA products were hydroxynitrates, carbonylnitrates, nitrooxy peroxynitrates, dihydroxynitrates, and dihydroxy peroxynitrates. The major second-generation SOA products were hydroxy and
oxo dinitrooxytetrahydrofurans, which have not been observed previously. The latter compounds were formed
by a series of reactions in which
-hydroxycarbonyls isomerize to cyclic hemiacetals, which then dehydrate
to form substituted dihydrofurans (unsaturated compounds) that rapidly react with NO3 radicals to form very
low volatility products. For the ~1 ppmv alkene concentrations used here, aerosol formed only for alkenes
C7 or larger. SOA formed from C7-C9 alkenes consisted only of second-generation products, whereas for
larger alkenes first-generation products were also present and contributions increased with increasing carbon
number apparently due to the formation of lower volatility products. The estimated mass fractions of first-
and second-generation products were approximately 50:50, 30:70, 10:90, and 0:100, for 1-tetradecene,
1-dodecene, 1-decene, and 1-octene SOA, respectively. This study shows that
-hydroxycarbonyls play a
key role in the formation of SOA in alkene-NO3 reactions and are likely to be important in other systems
because
-hydroxycarbonyls can also be formed from reactions of OH radicals and O3 with hydrocarbons.
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