AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines how the structure and chemistry of squalene and linoleic acid affect their oxidation rates when reacted with hydroxyl radicals (OH) in a lab setting.
  • Effective uptake coefficients (γeff) indicate that squalene's oxidation is influenced differently by oxygen levels compared to linoleic acid, suggesting varying reaction mechanisms.
  • The findings highlight that while oxygen facilitates the breakdown of squalene, it doesn't impact linoleic acid's volatilization rate, revealing distinct behaviors in the oxidation of branched versus linear organic aerosols.

Article Abstract

The kinetics and products of the heterogeneous OH-initiated oxidation of squalene (C30H50, a branched alkene with 6 C═C double bonds) particles are measured. These results are compared to previous measurements of the OH-initiated oxidation of linoleic acid (C18H32O2, a linear carboxylic acid with 2 C═C double bonds) particles to understand how molecular structure and chemical functionality influence reaction rates and mechanisms. In a 10% mixture of O2 in N2 in the flow reactor, the effective uptake coefficients (γeff) for squalene and linoleic acid are larger than unity, providing clear evidence for particle-phase secondary chain chemistry. γeff for squalene is 2.34 ± 0.07, which is smaller than γeff for linoleic acid (3.75 ± 0.18) despite the larger number of C═C double bonds in squalene. γeff for squalene increases with [O2] in the reactor, whereas γeff for linoleic acid decreases with increasing [O2]. This suggests that the chain cycling mechanism in these two systems is different since O2 promotes chain propagation in the OH + squalene reaction but promotes chain termination in the OH + linoleic acid reaction. Elemental analysis of squalene aerosol shows that an average of 1.06 ± 0.12 O atoms are added per reactive loss of squalene prior to the onset of particle volatilization. O2 promotes particle volatilization in the OH + squalene reaction, suggesting that fragmentation reactions are important when O2 is present in the OH oxidation of branched unsaturated organic aerosol. In contrast, O2 does not influence the rate of particle volatilization in the OH + linoleic acid reaction. This indicates that O2 does not alter the relative importance of fragmentation reactions in the OH oxidation of linear unsaturated organic aerosol.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jp502666gDOI Listing

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