4.8 Article

Photosensitized Reactions of a Phenolic Carbonyl from Wood Combustion in the Aqueous Phase-Chemical Evolution and Light Absorption Properties of AqSOA

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 55, Issue 8, Pages 5199-5211

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.0c07581

Keywords

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Funding

  1. U.S. National Science Foundation [AGS-1649212]
  2. California Agricultural Experiment Station [CA-D-ETX-2102-H, CA-D-LAW-6403-RR]
  3. JastroShields Graduate Research Award
  4. Donald G. Crosby Fellowship at UC Davis

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This study investigated the photosensitized oxidation of guaiacyl acetone (GA) in wood smoke-influenced fog/cloud water, showing efficient formation of aqueous secondary organic aerosol (aqSOA) with significant changes in composition and properties over the reaction course. High-molecular weight molecules with high aromaticity were identified as major contributors to UV-vis absorption of the aqSOA.
Guaiacyl acetone (GA) is a phenolic carbonyl emitted in significant quantities by wood combustion that undergoes rapid aqueous-phase oxidation to produce aqueous secondary organic aerosol (aqSOA). We investigate the photosensitized oxidation of GA by an organic triplet excited state (C-3*) and the formation and aging of the resulting aqSOA in wood smokeinfluenced fog/cloud water. The chemical transformations of the aqSOA were characterized in situ using a high-resolution time-offlight aerosol mass spectrometer. Additionally, aqSOA samples collected over different time periods were analyzed using highperformance liquid chromatography coupled with a photodiode array detector and a high-resolution Orbitrap mass spectrometer (HPLC-PDA-HRMS) to provide details on the molecular composition and optical properties of brown carbon (BrC) chromophores. Our results show efficient formation of aqSOA from GA, with an average mass yield around 80%. The composition and BrC properties of the aqSOA changed significantly over the course of reaction. Three generations of aqSOA products were identified via positive matrix factorization analysis of the aerosol mass spectrometry data. Oligomerization and functionalization dominated the production of the first-generation aqSOA, whereas fragmentation and ring-opening reactions controlled the formation of more oxidized second-and third-generation products. Significant formation of BrC was observed in the early stages of the photoreaction, while organic acids were produced throughout the experiment. High-molecular weight molecules (m/z > 180) with high aromaticity were identified via HPLC-PDA-HRMS and were found to account for a majority of the UV-vis absorption of the aqSOA.

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