Hariharan Annapoorani, Bready Conor J, Ajello Jack G, Black Samantha H, Shields George C, Johnson Christopher J
Department of Chemistry, Stony Brook University, 100 Nicolls Rd., Stony Brook, New York 11794, United States.
Department of Chemistry, Furman University, 3300 Poinsett Highway, Greenville, South Carolina 29613, United States.
J Phys Chem A. 2024 May 30;128(21):4268-4278. doi: 10.1021/acs.jpca.4c01629. Epub 2024 May 16.
New particle formation (NPF) is the process by which trace atmospheric acids and bases cluster and grow into particles that ultimately impact climate. Sulfuric acid concentration drives NPF, but nitrogen-containing bases promote the formation of more stable clusters via salt bridge formation. Recent computational efforts have suggested that amino acids can enhance NPF, predicting that they can stabilize new particles via multiple protonation sites, but there has yet to be experimental validation of these predictions. We used mass spectrometry and infrared spectroscopy to study the structure and stability of cationic clusters composed of glycine, sulfuric acid, and ammonia. When collisionally activated, clusters were significantly more likely to eliminate ammonia or sulfuric acid than glycine, while quantum chemical calculations predicted lower binding free energies for ammonia but similar binding free energies for glycine and sulfuric acid. These calculations predicted several low-energy structures, so we compared experimental and computed vibrational spectra to attempt to validate the computationally predicted minimum energy structure. Unambiguous identification of the experimental structure by comparison to these calculations was made difficult by the complexity of the experimental spectra and the fact that the identity of the computed lowest-energy structure depended strongly on temperature. If their vapors are present, amino acids are likely to be enriched in new particles by displacing more weakly bound ammonia, similar to the behavior of other atmospheric amines. The carboxylic acid groups were found to preferentially interact with other carboxylic acids, suggesting incipient organic/inorganic phase separation even at these small sizes.
新粒子形成(NPF)是指痕量大气中的酸和碱聚集并生长为最终影响气候的粒子的过程。硫酸浓度驱动新粒子形成,但含氮碱通过形成盐桥促进更稳定团簇的形成。最近的计算研究表明,氨基酸可以增强新粒子形成,预测它们可以通过多个质子化位点稳定新粒子,但这些预测尚未得到实验验证。我们使用质谱和红外光谱研究了由甘氨酸、硫酸和氨组成的阳离子团簇的结构和稳定性。碰撞激活时,团簇比甘氨酸更有可能消除氨或硫酸,而量子化学计算预测氨的结合自由能较低,而甘氨酸和硫酸的结合自由能相似。这些计算预测了几种低能量结构,因此我们比较了实验和计算的振动光谱,试图验证计算预测的最低能量结构。由于实验光谱的复杂性以及计算出的最低能量结构的身份强烈依赖于温度,通过与这些计算进行比较来明确识别实验结构变得困难。如果存在它们的蒸汽,氨基酸可能会通过取代结合较弱的氨而在新粒子中富集,这与其他大气胺的行为类似。发现羧酸基团优先与其他羧酸相互作用,这表明即使在这些小尺寸下也存在初始的有机/无机相分离。