Sources, properties, aging, and anthropogenic influences on OA and SOA during GoAmazon compared to the SE US and other locations

 

Author

Jose-Luis Jimenez — University of Colorado

Category

Secondary Organic Aerosol

Description

The Amazon and the SE US have large sources of biogenic VOCs and varying anthropogenic pollution impact, and often poor aerosol model performance. Recent results on the sources, properties, aging, and impact of anthropogenic pollution on OA and secondary OA (SOA) over these regions will be presented. SOA from IEPOX accounts for a substantial fraction of the SOA at both locations, and extends up to 6 km in the SE US. Higher IEPOX-SOA correlates with airmasses of high isoprene, IEPOX, sulfate, acidity, and lower NO. The IEPOX organosulfate accounts for ~10% of IEPOX-SOA over the SE US. The AMS ion C5H6O+ is shown to be a good marker of IEPOX-SOA, while total m/z 82 (as in ACSM) suffers larger interferences. The sinks of IEPOX-SOA via both OH oxidation and evaporation are slow. The lower volatility of IEPOX-SOA contrasts with the small semivolatile molecules that have so far been identified as its components, suggesting the importance of oligomerization. Urban SOA is estimated to account for 25% of the OA in the SE US using either the GEOS-Chem model or the measured 14C (using recent results that urban SOA (POA) is 30% (50%) non-fossil, mainly due to cooking emissions. An oxidation flow reactor (OFR) is used to investigate SOA formation by OH, O3, and NO3 in-situ. Largest SOA formation is always observed at night when monoterpenes (MT) are largest, and is underpredicted by SOA models that use MT as precursors but ignore partially-oxidized products. Closure results from models that account for the whole oxidation chain will be investigated. The partitioning of organic acids is found to proceed rapidly in response to temperature changes, in contrast with recent reports of very slow equilibration. The agreement with absorptive partitioning theory is reasonable for most species, except small acids that may be formed by thermal decomposition during analysis. Partitioning data from four instruments is compared, with reasonable agreement in many cases. Partitioning to aerosol water is minor for most of the measured species. Low volatility products of isoprene oxidation were measured during the FIXCIT campaign at Caltech, forming via several pathways and depositing quickly to chamber walls and aerosol seeds. Both the gas and aerosol results are very consistent with ambient results from the SE US. This pathway is separate from the IEPOX uptake pathway and is estimated to account for 3 Tg/yr of SOA, or ~2% of the global SOA budget.