Interfacial photochemistry of biogenic surfactants: a major source of abiotic volatile organic compounds

Author:

Brüggemann Martin12345ORCID,Hayeck Nathalie12345ORCID,Bonnineau Chloé678910,Pesce Stéphane678910,Alpert Peter A.12345,Perrier Sébastien12345,Zuth Christoph11121314,Hoffmann Thorsten11121314,Chen Jianmin1516171819,George Christian12345ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Univ Lyon

2. Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1

3. CNRS

4. IRCELYON

5. Villeurbanne

6. Irstea

7. UR MALY

8. Centre de Lyon-Villeurbanne

9. F-69616 Villeurbanne

10. France

11. Institute of Inorganic and Analytical Chemistry

12. Johannes Gutenberg-Universität

13. 55128 Mainz

14. Germany

15. Shanghai Key Laboratory of Atmospheric Particle Pollution and Prevention (LAP3)

16. Fudan Tyndall Centre

17. Fudan University

18. Shanghai 200433

19. China

Abstract

Films of biogenic compounds exposed to the atmosphere are ubiquitously found on the surfaces of cloud droplets, aerosol particles, buildings, plants, soils and the ocean. These air/water interfaces host countless amphiphilic compounds concentrated there with respect to in bulk water, leading to a unique chemical environment. Here, photochemical processes at the air/water interface of biofilm-containing solutions were studied, demonstrating abiotic VOC production from authentic biogenic surfactants under ambient conditions. Using a combination of online-APCI-HRMS and PTR-ToF-MS, unsaturated and functionalized VOCs were identified and quantified, giving emission fluxes comparable to previous field and laboratory observations. Interestingly, VOC fluxes increased with the decay of microbial cells in the samples, indicating that cell lysis due to cell death was the main source for surfactants and VOC production. In particular, irradiation of samples containing solely biofilm cells without matrix components exhibited the strongest VOC production upon irradiation. In agreement with previous studies, LC-MS measurements of the liquid phase suggested the presence of fatty acids and known photosensitizers, possibly inducing the observed VOC productionviaperoxy radical chemistry. Up to now, such VOC emissions were directly accounted to high biological activity in surface waters. However, the results obtained suggest that abiotic photochemistry can lead to similar emissions into the atmosphere, especially in less biologically-active regions. Furthermore, chamber experiments suggest that oxidation (O3/OH radicals) of the photochemically-produced VOCs leads to aerosol formation and growth, possibly affecting atmospheric chemistry and climate-related processes, such as cloud formation or the Earth’s radiation budget.

Funder

H2020 European Research Council

Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)

Subject

Physical and Theoretical Chemistry

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