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3) FUNDAMENTALS OF GAS-PHASE REACTIONS AND PHOTOCHEMISTRY 1 3) FUNDAMENTALS OF GAS-PHASE REACTIONS AND PHOTOCHEMISTRY What do we know so far? LOTS OF REACTIVE TRACE GASES !! Natural sources – NO from soil and lightning, many hydrocarbons (isoprene) from plants, sulfur species from oceans, … Anthropogenic sources – hydrocarbons, NO, … YIPPEE!! Chemistry! The atmosphere needs a way to remove these species. 2 3) FUNDAMENTALS OF GAS-PHASE REACTIONS AND PHOTOCHEMISTRY Some basic concepts: Stable Molecules versus “Free Radicals” Stable species – usually all electrons paired up. Atmospheric lifetimes hours, days, years. e.g., Oxygen wants two things bonded to it. H-O-H, O=C=O Nitrogen wants three... NH3 Carbon wants four… CH4, CH3-CH2-CH3, CH3-CH=CH-CH3 Often represented as 3 3) FUNDAMENTALS OF GAS-PHASE REACTIONS AND PHOTOCHEMISTRY Stable Molecules versus “Free Radicals” Free radicals – have unpaired electron(s). Atmospheric lifetimes seconds, minutes. e.g., •O-H radical, missing one bond (H), wants to steal one from somewhere. Similar story for •CH3 radical, missing one bond. Or the HO2 radical, H-O-O• These free radicals are usually generated by sunlight (photochemistry). Initiates chemistry, chain reactions, etc ! 4 REACTION KINETICS: (follows Brasseur, Orlando and Tyndall, pp. 95-114.) First, a couple of definitions. ELEMENTARY REACTION From Wikipedia - An elementary reaction is a chemical reaction in which one or more of chemical species react directly to form products in a single reaction step. Usually involves 1-3 molecules, with bimolecular most common: e.g., •OH + CH4 •CH3 + H2O 5 REACTION KINETICS: (follows Brasseur, Orlando and Tyndall, pp. 95-114.) COMPLEX REACTION SCHEME OR MECHANISM - Made up of a bunch of elementary reactions - e.g., the oxidation of CH4 to CH2O in the polluted troposphere leads to the following net effect: CH4 + 4 O2 CH2O + H2O + 2 O3 •OH + CH4 •CH3 + H2O •CH3 + O2 CH3O2• CH3O2• + NO CH3O• + NO2 CH3O• + O2 CH2O + HO2 HO2• + NO •OH + NO2 NO2 + hn NO + O NO2 + hn NO + O O• + O2 O3 O• + O2 O3 6 REACTION KINETICS: (follows Brasseur, Orlando and Tyndall, pp. 95-114.) BACK TO ELEMENTARY REACTIONS (BIMOLECULAR) Bimolecular reactions are the most common type of elementary reaction in the atmosphere Typically are of the form A-B + C A + B-C CH4 + OH CH3 + HOH Rate of the chemical reaction (disappearance of reactants or appearance of products): Rate = k is the rate constant, units of (time)-1 (concentration)-1 [AB] and [C] are concentrations Then rate in units of (concentration) (time)-1 7 MACROSCOPIC : (1044 molecules in the atmosphere) MICROSCOPIC : (about 25 molecules in a 10 nm cube) KINETIC THEORY OF GASES 8 KINETIC THEORY OF GASES: (most any Physical Chemistry text, including Adamson, 1979; Atkins, 1986). 1) Molecules Move !! (they have kinetic energy): Average Velocity: For N2, can show that c is about 4 x 104 cm/sec at 298 K (225 miles / hr). They traverse our 10 nm cube in 25 picosec! 9 KINETIC THEORY OF GASES: (most any Physical Chemistry text, including Adamson, 1979; Atkins, 1986). 2) Molecules collide with each other!! Frequency of collisions is about 5 x 109 sec-1 / atm at 298 K. 10 KINETIC THEORY OF GASES: (most any Physical Chemistry text, including Adamson, 1979; Atkins, 1986). 2) Molecules collide with each other!! Frequency of collisions is about 5 x 109 sec-1 / atm at 298 K. 3) Molecules can react with each other when they collide ! 11 KINETIC THEORY OF GASES: (most any Physical Chemistry text, including Adamson, 1979; Atkins, 1986). 2) Molecules collide with each other!! Frequency of collisions is about 5 x 109 sec-1 / atm at 298 K. 3) Molecules can react with each other when they collide ! 4) The rate at which collisions occur defines the maximum rate at which two molecules can react with each other. The maximum (“Gas Kinetic”) rate coefficient for a bimolecular reaction is about 5 x 109 sec-1 / atm. We usually use molecular units, 1 atm = 2.5 1019 molec cm-3, so collision rate (max. rate coefficient) is 2 x 10-10 s-1 / (molec cm-3), or 2 x 10-10 cm3 molec-1 s-1 12 REACTION KINETICS: (follows Brasseur, Orlando and Tyndall, pp. 95-114.) ELEMENTARY REACTIONS (BIMOLECULAR) What determines the value of the rate constant??? Recall: Frequency of collisions is about 2 x 10-10 cm3 molec-1 s-1 at 298 K. 13 REACTION KINETICS: (follows Brasseur, Orlando and Tyndall, pp. 95-114.) ELEMENTARY REACTIONS (BIMOLECULAR) BUT IN REALITY, REACTION DOES NOT OCCUR ON EVERY COLLISION!!! CH4 + OH CH3 + HOH Why NOT? – any ideas? 14 REACTION KINETICS: (follows Brasseur, Orlando and Tyndall, pp. 95-114.) ELEMENTARY REACTIONS (BIMOLECULAR) BUT IN REALITY, REACTION DOES NOT OCCUR ON EVERY COLLISION!!! Two main reasons: 1) There are energetic limitations. Colliding molecules must possess sufficient energy to overcome an ‘activation energy’ that typically exists. 2) Also, there may be ‘geometrical limitations’. Molecules must approach each other in such a way that the appropriate bonds can break / form. k = A * exp(-Ea/RT) 15 REACTION KINETICS: (follows Brasseur, Orlando and Tyndall, pp. 95-114.) ELEMENTARY REACTIONS (BIMOLECULAR) BUT IN REALITY, REACTION DOES NOT OCCUR ON EVERY COLLISION!!! Ea From Wikipedia k = A * exp(-Ea/RT) A is the pre-exponential factor, and accounts for the geometry limitations. Ea is activation energy. 16 REACTION KINETICS: (follows Brasseur, Orlando and Tyndall, pp. 95-114.) ELEMENTARY REACTIONS (BIMOLECULAR) k = A * exp(-Ea/RT) So, Let’s go back to the •OH / CH4 reaction. IF REACTION OCCURRED ON EVERY COLLISION, k = 2 x 10-10 cm3 molecule-1 s-1 Turns out that k = 2.45 x 10-12 * exp(- 3525 cal / RT) k = 6.3 x 10-15 cm3 molecule-1 s-1 at 298 K k = 5.2 x 10-16 cm3 molecule-1 s-1 at 210 K Only about 1 in 30000 OH/CH4 collisions results in reaction at 298 K. 17 REACTION KINETICS: (follows Brasseur, Orlando and Tyndall, pp. 95-114.) ELEMENTARY REACTIONS (BIMOLECULAR) Another example HO2• + NO •OH + NO2 – two radical species; no barrier to reaction (attractive forces). HO2• + NO HOO-NO •OH + NO2 Reaction turns out to have a “negative activation energy”. k = 3.5 x 10-12 exp(500 cal / RT) cm3 molecule-1 s-1 (Colder molecules more likely to react – less able to overcome attraction). 18 REACTION KINETICS: (follows Brasseur, Orlando and Tyndall, pp. 95-114.) ELEMENTARY REACTIONS (BIMOLECULAR) REACTION A-Factor (cm3 molecule-1 s-1) Activation Energy (cal.) Rate constant k at 298 K (cm3 molecule-1 s-1) •OH + CH4 •CH3 + H2O •OH + H2 H• + H2O •OH + CH3OH •CH2OH + H2O 2.45e-12 5.5e-12 6.7e-12 3525 3975 1200 6.3e-15 6.7e-15 8.9e-13 NO3• + CH3CHO HNO3 + CH3CO• 1.4e-12 3800 2.4e-15 HO2• + CH3O2• O2 + CH3OOH NO + CH3O2• NO2 + CH3O• CH3C(O)OO• + CH3C(O)OO• CH3C(O)O• + CH3C(O)O• + O2 3.8e-13 4.2e-12 2.9e-12 -1600 -360 -1000 5.6e-12 7.7e-12 1.5e-11 19 REACTION KINETICS: (follows Brasseur, Orlando and Tyndall, pp. 95-114.) EQUILIBRIUM – All elementary reactions are reversible. At equilibrium, rate of forward and reverse reactions must be equal. [ HO…H-CH3 ] Ea = 3525 calories Ea = 17450 calories •OH + CH4 kf [OH] [CH4] = kr [CH3] [H2O] HOH + •CH3 20 REACTION KINETICS: (follows Brasseur, Orlando and Tyndall, pp. 95-114.) EQUILIBRIUM – All elementary reactions are reversible. At equilibrium, rate of forward and reverse reactions must be equal. [ HO…H-CH3 ] Ea = 3525 calories kf = 6.3e-15 cm3 molec-1 s-1 Ea = 17450 calories kr = 1.2e-25 cm3 molec-1 s-1 •OH + CH4 kf [OH] [CH4] = kr [CH3] [H2O] HOH + •CH3 21 REACTION KINETICS: (follows Brasseur, Orlando and Tyndall, pp. 95-114.) “Equilibrium” and “Steady-State” are different: Equilibrium is a very precise, physical concept - established when forward and reverse rates of all reactions in a system are equal. Steady-State is more conceptual and approximate - A (short-lived) species, often an intermediate in a chemical scheme, is being produced and destroyed at roughly the same rate. Production Rate = Loss Rate O(1D) + H2O •OH Reaction with CH4 Reaction with CO Reaction with Isoprene HO2 + NO 22 REACTION KINETICS: (follows Brasseur, Orlando and Tyndall, pp. 95-114.) Let’s look at this in more detail. Consider a reaction scheme like this: OH + CH4 CH3 + H2O CH3 + O2 CH3O2 CH3O2 + NO CH3O + NO2 CH3O + O2 CH2O + HO2 HO2 + NO OH + NO2 NO2 + hn NO + O NO2 + hn NO + O O + O2 O3 O + O2 O3 Can assume CH3 to be in ‘steady-state’. (CH3O, CH3O2, OH, HO2, NO, NO2 too). What is the steady-state [CH3]? (What do we need to know?) 23 REACTION KINETICS: (follows Brasseur, Orlando and Tyndall, pp. 95-114.) OH + CH4 CH3 + H2O CH3 + O2 CH3O2 CH3O2 + NO CH3O + NO2 CH3O + O2 CH2O + HO2 HO2 + NO OH + NO2 NO2 + hn NO + O NO2 + hn NO + O O + O2 O3 O + O2 O3 Can assume CH3 to be in ‘steady-state’. (CH3O, CH3O2, OH, HO2, NO, NO2 too). Assume [OH] = 106, [CH4] = 4.6 x 1013, [O2] = 5 x 1018, all in molecule cm-3 Appropriate rate constants: k1 = 6.3 x 10-15 cm3 molecule-1 s-1 k2 = 1 x 10-12 cm3 molecule-1 s-1 24 REACTION KINETICS: (follows Brasseur, Orlando and Tyndall, pp. 95-114.) OH + CH4 CH3 + H2O CH3 + O2 CH3O2 CH3O2 + NO CH3O + NO2 CH3O + O2 CH2O + HO2 HO2 + NO OH + NO2 NO2 + hn NO + O NO2 + hn NO + O O + O2 O3 O + O2 O3 Can assume CH3 to be in ‘steady-state’. (CH3O, CH3O2, OH, HO2, NO, NO2 too). Assume [OH] = 106, [CH4] = 4.6 x 1013, [O2] = 5 x 1018, all in molecule cm-3 Appropriate rate constants: k1 = 6.3 x 10-15 cm3 molecule-1 s-1 k2 = 1 x 10-12 cm3 molecule-1 s-1 k1[OH][CH4] = k2[O2][CH3]ss 25 REACTION KINETICS: (follows Brasseur, Orlando and Tyndall, pp. 95-114.) OH + CH4 CH3 + H2O CH3 + O2 CH3O2 CH3O2 + NO CH3O + NO2 CH3O + O2 CH2O + HO2 HO2 + NO OH + NO2 NO2 + hn NO + O NO2 + hn NO + O O + O2 O3 O + O2 O3 Can assume CH3 to be in ‘steady-state’. (CH3O, CH3O2, OH, HO2, NO, NO2 too). Assume [OH] = 106, [CH4] = 4.6 x 1013, [O2] = 5 x 1018, all in molecule cm-3 Appropriate rate constants: k1 = 6.3 x 10-15 cm3 molecule-1 s-1 k1[OH][CH4] = k2[O2][CH3]ss k2 = 1 x 10-12 cm3 molecule-1 s-1 [CH3]ss = 0.06 molecule cm-3 (Very small !!) 26 REACTION KINETICS: (follows Brasseur, Orlando and Tyndall, pp. 95-114.) Termolecular reactions (three-body reactions). e.g., NO3 + NO2 + M N2O5 + M Here, M is the ‘bath gas’ (air – usually N2, O2). Not as simple as it looks. N2O5 initially formed with ‘excess energy’. Collisions help stabilize it. NO3 + NO2 N2O5* N2O5* + M N2O5 + M Reverse reaction – N2O5 decomposition. Collisions with the bath gas ‘activates’ some of the N2O5 molecules, leading to decomposition. N2O5 + M N2O5* + M N2O5* NO3 + NO2 Can involve an equilibrium (in this case between NO3, NO2 and N2O5). 27 REACTION KINETICS: (follows Brasseur, Orlando and Tyndall, pp. 95-114.) One More Concept – Atmospheric lifetime. If a compound is emitted into the atmosphere, how long (on average) will it take to remove it (assuming no other production or emission). Consider CH4 and its reaction with OH: •OH + CH4 •CH3 + H2O Let’s assume that, on average, [OH] = 106 molecule cm-3. Then k x [OH] is a constant, let’s call it k. In this particular case, with k = 3.7 x 10-15 cm3 molecule-1 s-1 at 273 K (roughly the average tropospheric temperature), k = 3.7 x 10-9 s-1. The atmospheric lifetime is then defined as the inverse of this k value. 1/ k = t (CH4) = 2.7 x 108 s, or about 8.5 years. 28 REACTION KINETICS: (follows Brasseur, Orlando and Tyndall, pp. 95-114.) One More Concept – Atmospheric lifetime. If a compound is emitted into the atmosphere, how long (on average) will it take to remove it (assuming no other production or emission). Consider CH4 and its reaction with OH: •OH + CH4 •CH3 + H2O Could think about this in reverse. What is the lifetime of OH? Let’s assume that, on average, [CH4] = 4.75 x 1013 molecule cm-3. Then k x [CH4] is a constant. With k = 6.3 x 10-15 cm3 molecule-1 s-1 at 298 K, k = 0.3 s-1. The atmospheric lifetime is then defined as the inverse of this k value. 1/ k = t(OH) = 3.3 s. 29 REACTION KINETICS: (follows Brasseur, Orlando and Tyndall, pp. 95-114.) One More Concept – Atmospheric lifetime. One more example – Isoprene, C5H8. Reacts with OH (daytime only), O3 (day and night) and NO3 (nighttime only). Calculate isoprene lifetime during daylight hours and during nighttime hours, assuming the following rate constants and concentrations: [OH] = 106 molecule cm-3, 12-hr daylight; k(OH+Isoprene) = 1 x 10-10 cm3 molecule-1 s-1 [NO3] = 108 molecule cm-3, 12-hr nighttime; k(NO3+Isoprene) = 7 x 10-13 cm3 molecule-1 s-1 [O3] = 1012 molecule cm-3, 24-hr average; k(O3+Isoprene) = 1.3 x 10-17 cm3 molecule-1 s-1 30 REACTION KINETICS: (follows Brasseur, Orlando and Tyndall, pp. 95-114.) One More Concept – Atmospheric lifetime. One more example – Isoprene, C5H8. Reacts with OH (daytime only), O3 (day and night) and NO3 (nighttime only). Daytime loss via OH and O3 reactions. [OH] = 2 x 106 molecule cm-3, 12-hr daylight; k(OH+Isoprene) = 1 x 10-10 cm3 molecule-1 s-1 [O3] = 1012 molecule cm-3, 24-hr average; k(O3+Isoprene) = 1.3 x 10-17 cm3 molecule-1 s-1 Then Isoprene Loss Rate = kOH [OH] + kO3[O3] = 2 x 10-4 s-1 + 1.3 x 10-5 s-1 = 2.13 x 10-4 s-1. Then, lifetime t = 1/ (Loss Rate) = 4700 sec. = 1.3 hrs. 31 REACTION KINETICS: (follows Brasseur, Orlando and Tyndall, pp. 95-114.) One More Concept – Atmospheric lifetime. One more example – Isoprene, C5H8. Reacts with OH (daytime only), O3 (day and night) and NO3 (nighttime only). Nighttime loss via NO3 and O3 reactions. [NO3] = 108 molecule cm-3, 12-hr nighttime; k(NO3+Isoprene) = 7 x 10-13 cm3 molecule-1 s-1 [O3] = 1012 molecule cm-3, 24-hr average; k(O3+Isoprene) = 1.3 x 10-17 cm3 molecule-1 s-1 Then Isoprene Loss Rate = kNO3 [NO3] + kO3[O3] = 7 x 10-5 s-1 + 1.3 x 10-5 s-1 = 8.3 x 10-5 s-1. Then, lifetime t = 1/ (Loss Rate) = 12000 sec. = 3.3 hrs. 32 Photolysis Reactions (Gas-Phase) Some generalities: - Sunlight provides energy across the electromagnetic spectrum, which can be absorbed by molecules. - Energies of chemical bonds typically correspond to UV photons. - Absorption of UV (sun)light can lead to photolytic destruction of certain molecules. e.g., NO2 + hn NO + O(3P) Threshold l: 392 nm (near UV) i.e., only photons at wavelengths < 392 nm or so can dissociate NO2 33 Photolysis Reactions (Gas-Phase) Some generalities: - Sunlight provides energy across the electromagnetic spectrum, which can be absorbed by molecules. - Energies of chemical bonds typically correspond to UV photons. - These photolytic processes can be seen as the initiators of atmospheric chemistry. Energy from the sun breaks chemical bonds, creates reactive free radicals: e.g., O3 + hn O2 + •O(1D) O(1D) + H2O •OH + •OH Essentially, we have split apart a water molecule and created two reactive OH radicals using one UV solar photon. Net: O3 + H2O + hn •OH + •OH + O2 34 Photolysis Reactions (Gas-Phase) Some generalities: - Sunlight provides energy across the electromagnetic spectrum, which can be absorbed by molecules. NO2 + hn NO + O(3P) Can consider these as unimolecular reactions, for given intensity and distribution of sunlight. “j-value” – unimolecular ‘rate coefficient’, units of s-1. Vary with spectral properties of the molecule of interest, but also with solar intensity (as a fn of wavelength) 35 Quantifying Photolysis Processes AB + hn A + B Photolysis reaction: Photolysis rates: Photolysis frequency (s-1) J= l F(l) s(l) f(l) dl (other names: photo-dissociation rate coefficient, J-value) 36 CALCULATION OF PHOTOLYSIS COEFFICIENTS J (s-1) = l F(l) s(l) f(l) dl F(l) = spectral actinic flux, photons cm-2 s-1 nm-1 probability of photon near molecule. s(l) = absorption cross section, cm2 molec-1 probability that photon is absorbed. f(l) = photodissociation quantum yield, molec photons-1 probability that absorbed photon causes dissociation. 37 38 CALCULATION OF PHOTOLYSIS COEFFICIENTS J (s-1) = l F(l) s(l) f(l) dl F(l) = spectral actinic flux, photons cm-2 s-1 nm-1 probability of photon near molecule. s(l) = absorption cross section, cm2 molec-1 probability that photon is absorbed. f(l) = photodissociation quantum yield, molec photons-1 probability that absorbed photon causes dissociation. 39 Measurement of Absorption Cross Section, s(l) Pressure gage Gas supply Pump for clean out Gas in Light detector Prism Absorption cell Lamp L Transmittance = I / Io = exp(-s n L) s = -1/(nL) ln( I/Io ) Easy: measure pressure (n = P/RT), and relative change in light: I/Io 40 O2 Absorption Cross Section 41 O3 Absorption Cross Section http://www.atmosphere.mpg.de 42 NO2 Absorption Cross Section http://www.atmosphere.mpg.de 43 CH2O Absorption Cross Section H2C=O http://www.atmosphere.mpg.de 44 CALCULATION OF PHOTOLYSIS COEFFICIENTS J (s-1) = l F(l) s(l) f(l) dl F(l) = spectral actinic flux, photons cm-2 s-1 nm-1 probability of photon near molecule. s(l) = absorption cross section, cm2 molec-1 probability that photon is absorbed. f(l) = photodissociation quantum yield, molec photons-1 probability that absorbed photon causes dissociation. 45 Measurement of Quantum Yields f(l) Pressure gage Gas supply Pump for clean out Gas in Light detector Prism Absorption cell Lamp L Transmittance = I / Io = exp(-s n L) Quantum Yield = number of breaks per photon absorbed f = Dn / DI Difficult: must measure absolute change in n (products) and I (photons absorbed) 46 Measured Quantum Yields 47 Spectral Range For Tropospheric Photochemistry J (s-1) = l F(l) s(l) f(l) dl - What do these integrals look like ?!? 1 0.9 0.8 dJ/d l (rel) 0.7 0.6 O3->O2+O1D NO2->NO+O 0.5 H2O2->2OH HONO->HO+NO 0.4 CH2O->H+HCO 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 280 300 320 Earth’s surface, overhead sun 340 360 380 400 420 Wavelength, nm 48 Aerosol Fundamentals Aerosol - A gaseous suspension of fine solid or liquid particles. http://www.thefreedictionary.com/aerosol “We have in this fine dust [aerosols] a most beautiful illustration of how the little things in the world work great effects by virtue of their numbers.” John Aitken (1839-1919) -John Aitken, 1880 49 Why should we care about aerosol? Air quality and Human health Global Climate Radiation, Chemistry, Rainfall Reactive surfaces/volume where chemistry can happen Aerosols are important from the molecular to the global scale 50 Aerosols are the principle component of what we perceive as “smog” Submicron aerosols are primarily responsible for visibility reduction. Pasadena, CA, on a clear day (hills are 7 km away) Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) PM2.5 15 g /m3 (annual average) PM10 150 g /m3 (24 hour) regulations. See national map of compliance at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Pm25-24asuper.gif Pasadena, CA, on a bad smog day 51 Aerosols and human health Submicron aerosols can penetrate to the deepest parts of the lung whereupon they can affect the pulmonary part of the respiratory system. Deposition Fraction Aerosol Deposition in Human Respiratory Tract 1 0.8 Total Pulmonary Nasal Tracheo-bronchial 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 0.01 0.1 1 10 Particle Diameter (m) 100 52 Aerosols and climate Drives Global Warming Direct effect – Light is scattered and absorbed 53 IPCC, AR4 Aerosol “indirect effect” on climate clean cloud (few particles): large cloud droplets • low albedo • efficient precipitation polluted cloud (many particles): small cloud droplets • high albedo • suppressed precipitation (very controversial) 54 Polar Stratospheric Cloud (PSC) g, gas s, particle ClONO2 (g) + HCl (s) (PSC) Cl2(g) + HNO3(s) Cl2 + hv 2Cl Leads to the “Ozone Hole” every Spring 55 Aerosols : solid and liquid particles suspended in the air Size: nm to 100 microns (range of 105) Lifetime: Troposphere (hours to days) Stratosphere (year) Primary aerosol: emitted directly into the air Secondary aerosol: gas to particle conversion • Composition: sulfate, nitrate, ammonium, sodium, chloride, trace metals, crustal, water, carbonaceous: elemental: emitted directly into the air (e.g. diesel soot) organic: a) directly by sources (e.g combustion, plant leaf) b) condensation of low volatile organic gases 56 “fine” diameters D < 2.5 microns sulfate, ammonium, organic carbon, elemental carbon Nucleation (Aitken) mode - 0.005 to 0.01 microns condensation of vapors Accumulation mode 0.1 to 2.5 microns coagulation “coarse” diameters D > 2.5 microns natural dust (e.g. desert) mechanical processes crustal materials biogenic (pollen, plant fragments) 57 Aerosols come in a variety of sizes, have variable lifetimes and compositions Seinfeld and Pandis 58 Size Distribution - “remote continental air” <100 nm: ultrafine Number Density (n) 100 nm<dp<1 m: accumulation Surface Area (π r2 n) sub-2.5 m: fine coarse Volume Density (4/3 π r3 n) Seinfeld and Pandis 59 Seinfeld and Pandis 60 The chemical properties of atmospheric aerosols: North America http://eosweb.larc.nasa.gov/PRODOCS/narsto/table_narsto.html Annual mean PM2.5 concentrations (NARSTO, 2004) 61 Secondary Organic Aerosol (SOA) SOA accounts for large fraction of submicron particulate mass Arises from nucleation / condensation of low volatility products of oxidation… We’ll talk more about organic chemistry later, but basic idea is that more oxygen on a molecule usually means lower vapor pressure E.g., Biogenic terpenes, C10H16, can be oxidized to make things like C10H16O2, then C10H16O4. Some of these products nucleate new particles, or add on to existing ones. Jimenez, Science, 326, Dec 2009 Odum, Env Sci Tech, 30, 2580, 1996 Ervens, JGR, 109, 2004 62 Secondary Organic Aerosol (SOA) M. Kulmala et al., Nature Protocols, 2012 63 Modeling Organic Aerosol: What are the challenges? Partitioning Semi-Volatile Organic Vapors SOA Nucleation Cloud Processing Oxidation by OH, O3, NO3 Deposition Evaporation upon dilution VOCs Isoprene Monoterpenes Sesquiterpenes Forest POA Aromatics Alkanes For MILARGO application see: Hodzic, ACP,2009 SOA is underestimated Direct Emission Traffic Industries Surface / multiphase reactions Biomass Burning Biological Debris Alma Hodzic Cloud Chemistry (more generally, Aqueous Phase Chemistry) Chemistry occurring in or on liquid particles (cloud drops, rain drops, fog droplets, aerosols) Cloud droplets Will focus on two aspects of this in terms of atmospheric composition: 1) Scavenging of oxidized gases (nitric acid, sulfuric acid) 2) Oxidative Chemistry (sulfur species, carbon species) 65 Aqueous Phase Chemistry 1) Scavenging of oxidized gases - Governed by Henry’s Law equilibrium HNO3 HNO3 (aq) (gas) [HNO3]aq = KH,HNO3 * pHNO3 KH ≡ Henry’s Law Constant pHNO3 ≡Partial Pressure (atm) [HNO3]aq ≡ Aq. Phase Conc (mol/l) 66 Aqueous Phase Chemistry 1) Scavenging of oxidized gases - Governed by Henry’s Law equilibrium Some Henry’s Law Constants of Atmospheric Relevance HNO3 HNO3 (aq) Chemical Species Henry’s Law Constant @ 25°C (mol/L/atm) HNO3 2.1x105 H2O2 7.5x104 HCHO 3.5x103 NH3 57.5 SO2 1.2 pHNO3 ≡Partial Pressure (atm) O3 0.0113 [HNO3]aq ≡ Aq. Phase Conc (mol/l) CO 9.6x10-4 (gas) [HNO3]aq = KH,HNO3 * pHNO3 KH ≡ Henry’s Law Constant 67 Phase Ratio between Gas and Liquid Px = L KH RT 268 K 293 K HNO3 1.6x109 6.4x106 H2O2 6.4 0.8 SO2 0.072 0.014 CO2 6.3x10-7 2.9x10-7 O3 1.9x10-7 9.1x10-8 68 Aqueous Phase Chemistry SO2 • H2O H+ + HSO3H+ + SO3= Dissociation in water increases the effective solubility of the gas NB: Solubility of SO2 strong function of droplet acidity (i.e., pH) 69 S(IV) Solubility and Composition Depends Strongly on pH Strongly acidic cloud water Neutral / slightly basic cloud water 70 [Seinfeld & Pandis] Aqueous Phase Chemistry Chemical reaction in drop HSO3- + oxidant SO4= SO3= + oxidant SO2, HSO3-, SO32- collectively called S(IV). The atmosphere is oxidizing – wants to push S(IV) to S(VI) {H2SO4 / HSO4- / SO42-} In aqueous phase, H2O2 and O3 can do the trick. Relative contribution of these two oxidants is a complex function of the solubilities, reaction rates, etc. Bottom Line: 71 Aqueous Phase Chemistry Reaction rates for S(IV) oxidation by H2O2 and O3 H2O2 268 K 278 K 288 K 298 K O3 + SO3= O3 + HSO3SO2 = 2 ppbv H2O2 = 1 ppbv O3 = 50 ppbv 72 Aqueous Phase Chemistry GLOBAL CLIMATE MODEL SIMULATIONS: 50-55% of sulfate in troposphere is from aqueous-phase chemistry The remainder is from gas-phase chemistry, reaction of OH with SO2 Barth et al., 2000 73 Aqueous Phase Chemistry CH4 CH2O S(IV) chemistry is not only aqueous chemistry going on! CH2(OH)2+ OH CO2 HCOO- + OH HCOOH + OH 74 Aqueous Phase Chemistry Chemical reaction in drop Organic aqueous chemistry is a source of secondary organic aerosol Chen et al. (2007) ACP 75