Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management, University of California, Berkeley, California, USA.
Environ Sci Technol. 2013 Apr 16;47(8):3781-7. doi: 10.1021/es304587x. Epub 2013 Mar 27.
In situ measurements of organic compounds in both gas and particle phases were made with a thermal desorption aerosol gas chromatography (TAG) instrument. The gas/particle partitioning of phthalic acid, pinonaldehyde, and 6,10,14-trimethyl-2-pentadecanone is discussed in detail to explore secondary organic aerosol (SOA) formation mechanisms. Measured fractions in the particle phase (f(part)) of 6,10,14-trimethyl-2-pentadecanone were similar to those expected from the absorptive gas/particle partitioning theory, suggesting that its partitioning is dominated by absorption processes. However, f(part) of phthalic acid and pinonaldehyde were substantially higher than predicted. The formation of low-volatility products from reactions of phthalic acid with ammonia is proposed as one possible mechanism to explain the high f(part) of phthalic acid. The observations of particle-phase pinonaldehyde when inorganic acids were fully neutralized indicate that inorganic acids are not required for the occurrence of reactive uptake of pinonaldehyde on particles. The observed relationship between f(part) of pinonaldehyde and relative humidity suggests that the aerosol water plays a significant role in the formation of particle-phase pinonaldehyde. Our results clearly show it is necessary to include multiple gas/particle partitioning pathways in models to predict SOA and multiple SOA tracers in source apportionment models to reconstruct SOA.
采用热脱附气溶胶气相色谱仪(TAG)原位测量了气相和颗粒相中的有机化合物。详细讨论了邻苯二甲酸、蒎烯醛和 6,10,14-三甲基-2-十五烷酮的气/粒分配,以探讨二次有机气溶胶(SOA)形成机制。测量的颗粒相中的 6,10,14-三甲基-2-十五烷酮分数(f(part))与吸收性气/粒分配理论预期的分数相似,表明其分配主要由吸收过程决定。然而,邻苯二甲酸和蒎烯醛的 f(part)显著高于预测值。提出邻苯二甲酸与氨反应形成低挥发性产物是解释邻苯二甲酸高 f(part)的一种可能机制。当无机酸完全中和时观察到颗粒相中蒎烯醛的存在表明,发生蒎烯醛在颗粒上的反应性吸收不需要无机酸。观察到的蒎烯醛 f(part)与相对湿度之间的关系表明,气溶胶水在颗粒相中蒎烯醛的形成中起着重要作用。我们的结果清楚地表明,在模型中必须包括多种气/粒分配途径来预测 SOA,并在源分配模型中使用多种 SOA 示踪剂来重建 SOA。