Author:
Hao Liqing,Kari Eetu,Leskinen Ari,Worsnop Douglas R.,Virtanen Annele
Abstract
Abstract. Ammonia (NH3), a gaseous compound ubiquitously present in the
atmosphere, is involved in the formation of secondary organic aerosol (SOA),
but the exact mechanism is still not well known. This study presents the
results of SOA experiments from the photooxidation of α-pinene in
the presence of NH3 in the reaction chamber. SOA was formed in
in nucleation experiments and in seeded experiments with ammonium sulfate
particles as seeds. The chemical composition and time series of compounds in
the gas and particle phase were characterized by an online
high-resolution time-of-flight proton-transfer-reaction mass spectrometer
(HR-ToF-PTRMS) and a high-resolution time-of-flight aerosol mass
spectrometer (HR-ToF-AMS), respectively. Our results show that the mass
concentration of ammonium (NH4+) was still rising even after the
mass concentration of the organic component started to decrease due to aerosol
wall deposition and evaporation, implying the continuous new formation of
particle-phase ammonium in the process. Stoichiometric neutralization
analysis of aerosol indicates that organic acids have a central role in the
formation of particle-phase ammonium. Our measurements show a good
correlation between the gas-phase organic mono- and dicarboxylic acids
formed in the photooxidation of α-pinene and the ammonium in the
particle phase, thus highlighting the contribution of gas-phase organic
acids to the ammonium formation. The work shows that the gas-phase organic
acids contribute to the SOA formation by forming organic ammonium salts
through acid–base reaction. The changes in aerosol mass, particle size and
chemical composition resulting from the NH3–SOA interaction can
potentially alter the aerosol direct and indirect forcing and therefore
alter its impact on climate change.
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