4.6 Article

The kinetics and mechanism of SO2 oxidation by O-3 on mineral dust

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 4, Issue 19, Pages 4694-4699

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/b203529b

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The oxidation of SO2 by O-3 on mineral dust was studied using dffiuse reflectance infrared Fourier transform spectroscopy (DRIFTS). Formation of sulfate was observed on the surface. A two-step mechanism that involves physisorbed SO2 followed by oxidation is presented. The formation rate was determined to be first order with respect to SO2 and zero order in O-3. The reactive uptake coefficient, gamma was determined from the infrared absorbance, that was calibrated by ion chromatography, and from the geometric or the BET surface area. gamma(SO2) was independent of the SO2 concentration and was determined to be in the order of 10(-3) using the geometric surface area, or 10(-7) using the BET surface area for [SO2] = 2.2 x 10(12) to 2.0 x 10(13) and [O-3] = 5.6 x 10(12) (in units of molecule cm(-3)). gamma(O3) depended linearly on the O-3 concentration and varied from 10(-2) to 10(-4) using the geometric area or 10(-6) to 10(-8) using the BET area for [O-3] = 1.9 x 10(12) to 5.5 x 10(13) and [SO2] = 5.4 x 10(12) (in units of molecule cm(-3)). In all experiments surface saturation was observed with an amount of 2 x 10(9) sulfate ions g(-1) on the mineral dust sample. In the presence of water vapor regeneration of active sites was observed. After several exposures to water vapor corresponding to 80% relative humidity and successive SO2 and O-3 treatments the amount of formed sulfate covering the surface was increased by 47% compared to the dry experiments.

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