Humic acid (HA) is thought to promote NO conversion to nitrous acid (HONO) on soil surfaces during the day. However, it has proven difficult to identify the reactive sites in natural HA substrates. The mechanism of NO reduction on soil surrogates composed of HA and clay minerals was studied by use of a coated-wall flow reactor and cavity-enhanced spectroscopy. Conversion of NO to HONO in the dark was found to be significant and correlated to the abundance of C-O moieties in HA determined from the X-ray photoelectron spectra of the C 1s region. Twice as much HONO was formed when NO reacted with HA that was photoreduced by irradiation with UV-visible light compared to the dark reaction; photochemical reactivity was correlated to the abundance of C═O moieties rather than C-O groups. Bulk electrolysis was used to generate HA in a defined reduction state. Electrochemically reduced HA enhanced NO-to-HONO conversion by a factor of 2 relative to non-reduced HA. Our findings suggest that hydroquinones and benzoquinones, which are interchangeable via redox equilibria, contribute to both thermal and photochemical HONO formation. This conclusion is supported by experiments that studied NO reactivity on mineral surfaces coated with the model quinone, juglone. Results provide further evidence that redox-active sites on soil surfaces drive ground-level NO-to-nitrite conversion in the atmospheric boundary layer throughout the day, while amphoteric mineral surfaces promote the release of nitrite formed as gaseous HONO.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.7b01363 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!