Isotopic evidence for dominant secondary production of HONO in near-ground wildfire plumes
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Published:2021-09-03
Issue:17
Volume:21
Page:13077-13098
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ISSN:1680-7324
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Container-title:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Chem. Phys.
Author:
Chai JiajueORCID, Dibb Jack E., Anderson Bruce E., Bekker Claire, Blum Danielle E., Heim Eric, Jordan Carolyn E.ORCID, Joyce Emily E., Kaspari Jackson H.ORCID, Munro Hannah, Walters Wendell W., Hastings Meredith G.
Abstract
Abstract. Nitrous acid (HONO) is an important precursor to hydroxyl radical
(OH) that determines atmospheric oxidative capacity and thus impacts climate
and air quality. Wildfire is not only a major direct source of HONO, it also
results in highly polluted conditions that favor the heterogeneous formation of
HONO from nitrogen oxides (NOx= NO + NO2) and nitrate on both
ground and particle surfaces. However, these processes remain poorly
constrained. To quantitatively constrain the HONO budget under various
fire and/or smoke conditions, we combine a unique dataset of field concentrations
and isotopic ratios (15N / 14N and 18O / 16O) of NOx
and HONO with an isotopic box model. Here we report the first isotopic
evidence of secondary HONO production in near-ground wildfire plumes (over a
sample integration time of hours) and the subsequent quantification of the
relative importance of each pathway to total HONO production. Most
importantly, our results reveal that nitrate photolysis plays a minor role
(<5 %) in HONO formation in daytime aged smoke, while
NO2-to-HONO heterogeneous conversion contributes 85 %–95 % to total
HONO production, followed by OH + NO (5 %–15 %). At nighttime, heterogeneous
reduction of NO2 catalyzed by redox active species (e.g., iron oxide
and/or quinone) is essential (≥ 75 %) for HONO production in addition
to surface NO2 hydrolysis. Additionally, the 18O / 16O of HONO
is used for the first time to constrain the NO-to-NO2 oxidation
branching ratio between ozone and peroxy radicals. Our approach provides a
new and critical way to mechanistically constrain atmospheric chemistry and/or air
quality models on a diurnal timescale.
Funder
National Science Foundation National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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