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Published October 22, 2013 | Published + Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Molecular understanding of atmospheric particle formation from sulfuric acid and large oxidized organic molecules

Abstract

Atmospheric aerosols formed by nucleation of vapors affect radiative forcing and therefore climate. However, the underlying mechanisms of nucleation remain unclear, particularly the involvement of organic compounds. Here, we present high-resolution mass spectra of ion clusters observed during new particle formation experiments performed at the Cosmics Leaving Outdoor Droplets chamber at the European Organization for Nuclear Research. The experiments involved sulfuric acid vapor and different stabilizing species, including ammonia and dimethylamine, as well as oxidation products of pinanediol, a surrogate for organic vapors formed from monoterpenes. A striking resemblance is revealed between the mass spectra from the chamber experiments with oxidized organics and ambient data obtained during new particle formation events at the Hyytiälä boreal forest research station. We observe that large oxidized organic compounds, arising from the oxidation of monoterpenes, cluster directly with single sulfuric acid molecules and then form growing clusters of one to three sulfuric acid molecules plus one to four oxidized organics. Most of these organic compounds retain 10 carbon atoms, and some of them are remarkably highly oxidized (oxygen-to-carbon ratios up to 1.2). The average degree of oxygenation of the organic compounds decreases while the clusters are growing. Our measurements therefore connect oxidized organics directly, and in detail, with the very first steps of new particle formation and their growth between 1 and 2 nm in a controlled environment. Thus, they confirm that oxidized organics are involved in both the formation and growth of particles under ambient conditions.

Additional Information

© 2013 National Academy of Sciences. Approved September 5, 2013 (received for review April 12, 2013). Published online before print October 7, 2013. The European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN)'s support of CLOUD with important technical and financial resources and provision of a particle beam from the Proton Synchrotron is gratefully acknowledged. This research was funded by the European Commission 7th Framework Programme (Marie Curie Initial Training Network "CLOUD-ITN," Grant 215072), the European Research Council (ERC) Advanced Grant Atmospheric nucleation: from molecular to global scale (ATMNUCLE) (Grant 227463), the ERC Starting Grant "Role of Molecular Clusters in Atmospheric Particle Formation (MOCAPAF)" (Grant 257360), the Academy of Finland via the Centre of Excellence Programme (Project 1118615) and Grant 1133872, the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (Project 01LK0902A), the Swiss National Science Foundation (Projects 206621_125025 and 206620_130527), the Austrian Science Fund (Projects P19546 and L593), the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (Project CERN/FP/116387/2010), the Russian Foundation for Basic Research (Grant N08-02-91006-CERN), the Davidow Foundation, the Royal Society Wolfson Research Award, and the US National Science Foundation (Grants AGS1136479 and CHE1012293).

Attached Files

Published - PNAS-2013-Schobesberger-17223-8.pdf

Supplemental Material - pnas.201306973SI.pdf

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