Effects of NOx on the Volatility of Secondary Organic Aerosol from Isoprene Photooxidation

 
Poster PDF

Authors

Nga Lee Ng — Georgia Institute of Technology
Lu Xu — Georgia Institute of Technology
Matthew Stephen Kollman — Georgia Institute of Technology
Chen Song — Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
John E Shilling — Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Category

Secondary Organic Aerosol

Description

The effects of NOx on the volatility of the secondary organic aerosol (SOA) formed from isoprene photooxidation are investigated in environmental chamber experiments. Two types of experiments are performed. In HO2-dominant experiments, organic peroxy radicals (RO2) primarily react with HO2. In mixed experiments, RO2 reacts through multiple pathways, including with NO, NO2, and HO2. The volatility and oxidation state of isoprene SOA are sensitive to and exhibit a nonlinear dependence on NOx levels. Depending on the NOx levels, the SOA formed in mixed experiments can be of similar or lower volatility compared to that formed in HO2-dominant experiments. The dependence of SOA yield, volatility, and oxidation state on the NOx level likely arises from gas-phase RO2 chemistry and succeeding particle phase oligomerization reactions. The NOx level also plays a strong role in SOA aging. While the volatility of SOA in mixed experiments does not change substantially over time, SOA becomes less volatile and more oxidized as oxidation progresses in HO2-dominant experiments.

Lead PI

Nga Lee Ng — Georgia Institute of Technology