4.4 Article

Insect Infestation Increases Viscosity of Biogenic Secondary Organic Aerosol

Journal

ACS EARTH AND SPACE CHEMISTRY
Volume 7, Issue 5, Pages 1060-1071

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsearthspacechem.3c00007

Keywords

Monoterpene; sesquiterpene; herbivory-induced stress; plant stress volatiles; biogenic volatile organic compound emissions; aerosol particle mixing time

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Plant stress can affect the emissions of volatile organic compounds, which in turn can impact the properties of secondary organic aerosols (SOA). This study examined the chemical composition and viscosity of SOA generated from healthy and aphid-stressed Canary Island pine trees. The results show that aphid-stressed pine tree SOA has higher viscosity, which is attributed to the increased fraction of sesquiterpenes in the emissions.
Plant stress alters emissions of volatile organic compounds. However, little is known about how this could influence climate-relevant properties of secondary organic aerosol (SOA), particularly from complex mixtures such as real plant emissions. In this study, the chemical composition and viscosity were examined for SOA generated from real healthy and aphid-stressed Canary Island pine (Pinus canariensis) trees, which are commonly used for landscaping in Southern California. Healthy Canary Island pine (HCIP) and stressed Canary Island pine (SCIP) aerosols were generated in a 5 m3 environmental chamber at 35-84% relative humidity and room temperature via OH-initiated oxidation. Viscosities of the collected particles were measured using an offline poke-flow method, after conditioning the particles in a humidified air flow. SCIP particles were consistently more viscous than HCIP particles. The largest differences in particle viscosity were observed in particles conditioned at 50% relative humidity where the viscosity of SCIP particles was an order of magnitude larger than that of HCIP particles. The increased viscosity for the aphid-stressed pine tree SOA was attributed to the increased fraction of sesquiterpenes in the emission profile. The real pine SOA particles, both healthy and aphid-stressed, were more viscous than alpha-pinene SOA particles, demonstrating the limitation of using a single monoterpene as a model compound to predict the physicochemical properties of real biogenic SOA. However, synthetic mixtures composed of only a few major compounds present in emissions (<10 compounds) can reproduce the viscosities of SOA observed from the more complex real plant emissions.

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