Formaldehyde, HCHO, is the highest-volume carbonyl in the atmosphere. It absorbs sunlight at wavelengths shorter than 330 nm and photolyses to form H and HCO radicals, which then react with O to form HO. Here we show HCHO has an additional HO formation pathway. At photolysis energies below the energetic threshold for radical formation we directly detect HO at low pressures by cavity ring-down spectroscopy and indirectly detect HO at 1 bar by Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy end-product analysis. Supported by electronic structure theory and master equation simulations, we attribute this HO to photophysical oxidation (PPO): photoexcited HCHO relaxes non-radiatively to the ground electronic state where the far-from-equilibrium, vibrationally activated HCHO molecules react with thermal O. PPO is likely to be a general mechanism in tropospheric chemistry and, unlike photolysis, PPO will increase with increasing O pressure.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41557-023-01272-4 | DOI Listing |
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