Measurement report: Variability in the composition of biogenic volatile organic compounds in a Southeastern US forest and their role in atmospheric reactivity
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Published:2021-10-22
Issue:20
Volume:21
Page:15755-15770
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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:
McGlynn Deborah F., Barry Laura E. R., Lerdau Manuel T., Pusede Sally E., Isaacman-VanWertz GabrielORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Despite the significant contribution of biogenic volatile
organic compounds (BVOCs) to organic aerosol formation and ozone production
and loss, there are few long-term, year-round, ongoing measurements of
their volume mixing ratios and quantification of their impacts on
atmospheric reactivity. To address this gap, we present 1 year of hourly
measurements of chemically resolved BVOCs between 15 September 2019 and
15 September 2020, collected at a research tower in Central Virginia
in a mixed forest representative of ecosystems in the Southeastern US.
Mixing ratios of isoprene, isoprene oxidation products, monoterpenes, and
sesquiterpenes are described and examined for their impact on the hydroxy
radical (OH), ozone, and nitrate reactivity. Mixing ratios of isoprene range
from negligible in the winter to typical summertime 24 h averages of 4–6 ppb, while monoterpenes have more stable mixing ratios in the range of tenths of a part per billion up to ∼2 ppb year-round. Sesquiterpenes are
typically observed at mixing ratios of <10 ppt, but this represents
a lower bound in their abundance. In the growing season, isoprene dominates
OH reactivity but is less important for ozone and nitrate reactivity.
Monoterpenes are the most important BVOCs for ozone and nitrate reactivity
throughout the year and for OH reactivity outside of the growing season. To
better understand the impact of this compound class on OH, ozone, and
nitrate reactivity, the role of individual monoterpenes is examined. Despite
the dominant contribution of α-pinene to total monoterpene mass, the
average reaction rate of the monoterpene mixture with atmospheric oxidants
is between 25 % and 30 % faster than α-pinene due to the
contribution of more reactive but less abundant compounds. A majority of
reactivity comes from α-pinene and limonene (the most significant
low-mixing-ratio, high-reactivity isomer), highlighting the importance of
both mixing ratio and structure in assessing atmospheric impacts of
emissions.
Funder
Division of Atmospheric and Geospace Sciences Virginia Space Grant Consortium
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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