The reaction of OH and NO(2) to form gaseous nitric acid (HONO(2)) is among the most influential in atmospheric chemistry. Despite its importance, the rate coefficient remains poorly determined under tropospheric conditions because of difficulties in making laboratory rate measurements in air at 760 torr and uncertainties about a secondary channel producing peroxynitrous acid (HOONO). We combined two sensitive laser spectroscopy techniques to measure the overall rate of both channels and the partitioning between them at 25°C and 760 torr. The result is a significantly more precise value of the rate constant for the HONO(2) formation channel, 9.2 (±0.4) × 10(-12) cm(3) molecule(-1) s(-1) (1 SD) at 760 torr of air, which lies toward the lower end of the previously established range. We demonstrate the impact of the revised value on photochemical model predictions of ozone concentrations in the Los Angeles airshed.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.1193030 | DOI Listing |
Magn Reson Med
January 2025
Oxygen Measurement Core, O2M Technologies, LLC, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
Purpose: Solid crystalline spin probes, such as lithium phthalocyanine (LiPc) and lithium octa-n-butoxynaphthalocyanine (LiNc-BuO), allow repeated oxygen measurement using electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR). Due to their short relaxation times, their use for pulse EPR oxygen imaging is limited. In this study, we developed and tested a new class of solid composite spin probes that modified the relaxation rates R and R of LiPc or LiNc-BuO probes, which allowed pO measurements in the full dynamic (0-760 torr) range.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Environ Sci (China)
May 2025
State Key Laboratory for Structural Chemistry of Unstable and Stable Species, Chinese Academy of Sciences Research/Education Center for Excellence in Molecular Sciences, Institute of Chemistry Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100190, China; University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China.
Unsaturated alcohols are a class of Biogenic volatile organic compounds (BVOCs) emitted in large quantities by plants when damaged or under adverse environmental conditions, and studies on their atmospheric degradation at night are still lacking. We used chamber experiments to study the gas-phase reactions of three unsaturated alcohols, E-2-penten-1-ol, Z-2-hexen-1-ol and Z-3-hepten-1-ol, with NO radicals (NO•) during the night. The rate constants of these reactions were (11.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Sci Pollut Res Int
August 2024
Department of Chemistry, Indian Institute of Technology Madras, Chennai, 600036, India.
Temperature-dependent rate coefficients for the reactions of 2-methyl tetrahydrofuran (MTHF) with Cl atoms in the temperature range of 268-343 K at atmospheric pressure were measured using the relative-rate method. Ethylene and propane were used as reference compounds. Quantitative analysis of the post-photolysis reaction mixture was conducted using a gas chromatograph paired with a flame ionization detector (GC-FID).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Sci Pollut Res Int
August 2024
Facultad de Ciencias y Tecnologías Químicas, Departamento de Química Física, Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha (UCLM), Avda. Camilo José Cela, 1B, 13071, Ciudad Real, Spain.
The kinetic study of the gas-phase reactions of hydroxyl (OH) radicals and chlorine (Cl) atoms with CFCHFCFOCH (HFE-356mec3) and CHFCHFOCF (HFE-236ea1) was performed by the pulsed laser photolysis/laser-induced fluorescence technique and a relative method by using Fourier Transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy as detection technique. The temperature dependences of the OH-rate coefficients (k(T) in cms) between 263 and 353 K are well described by the following expressions: 9.93 × 10exp{-(988 ± 35)/T}for HFE-356mec3 and 4.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Physiol
August 2024
Department of Human Physiology, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR, USA.
During sea-level exercise, blood flow through intrapulmonary arteriovenous anastomoses (IPAVA) in humans without a patent foramen ovale (PFO) is negatively correlated with pulmonary pressure. Yet, it is unknown whether the superior exercise capacity of Tibetans well adapted to living at high altitude is the result of lower pulmonary pressure during exercise in hypoxia, and whether their cardiopulmonary characteristics are significantly different from lowland natives of comparable ancestry (e.g.
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