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1.
ACS EST Air ; 1(7): 646-659, 2024 Jul 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39021670

ABSTRACT

Hydroxymethanesulfonate (HMS) in fine aerosol particles has been reported at significant concentrations along with sulfate under extreme cold conditions (-35 °C) in Fairbanks, Alaska, a high latitude city. HMS, a component of S(IV) and an adduct of formaldehyde and sulfur dioxide, forms in liquid water. Previous studies may have overestimated HMS concentrations by grouping it with other S(IV) species. In this work, we further investigate HMS and the speciation of S(IV) through the Alaskan Layered Pollution and Chemical Analysis (ALPACA) intensive study in Fairbanks. We developed a method utilizing hydrogen peroxide to isolate HMS and found that approximately 50% of S(IV) is HMS for total suspended particulates and 70% for PM2.5. The remaining unidentified S(IV) species are closely linked to HMS during cold polluted periods, showing strong increases in concentration relative to sulfate with decreasing temperature, a weak dependence on particle water, and similar particle size distributions, suggesting a common aqueous formation process. A portion of the unidentified S(IV) may originate from additional aldehyde-S(IV) adducts that are unstable in the water-based chemical analysis process, but further chemical characterization is needed. These results show the importance of organic S(IV) species in extreme cold environments that promote unique aqueous chemistry in supercooled liquid particles.

2.
ACS EST Air ; 1(3): 200-222, 2024 Mar 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38482269

ABSTRACT

The Alaskan Layered Pollution And Chemical Analysis (ALPACA) field experiment was a collaborative study designed to improve understanding of pollution sources and chemical processes during winter (cold climate and low-photochemical activity), to investigate indoor pollution, and to study dispersion of pollution as affected by frequent temperature inversions. A number of the research goals were motivated by questions raised by residents of Fairbanks, Alaska, where the study was held. This paper describes the measurement strategies and the conditions encountered during the January and February 2022 field experiment, and reports early examples of how the measurements addressed research goals, particularly those of interest to the residents. Outdoor air measurements showed high concentrations of particulate matter and pollutant gases including volatile organic carbon species. During pollution events, low winds and extremely stable atmospheric conditions trapped pollution below 73 m, an extremely shallow vertical scale. Tethered-balloon-based measurements intercepted plumes aloft, which were associated with power plant point sources through transport modeling. Because cold climate residents spend much of their time indoors, the study included an indoor air quality component, where measurements were made inside and outside a house to study infiltration and indoor sources. In the absence of indoor activities such as cooking and/or heating with a pellet stove, indoor particulate matter concentrations were lower than outdoors; however, cooking and pellet stove burns often caused higher indoor particulate matter concentrations than outdoors. The mass-normalized particulate matter oxidative potential, a health-relevant property measured here by the reactivity with dithiothreiol, of indoor particles varied by source, with cooking particles having less oxidative potential per mass than pellet stove particles.

3.
Environ Sci Technol ; 56(12): 7657-7667, 2022 06 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35544773

ABSTRACT

Fairbanks, Alaska, is a subarctic city with fine particle (PM2.5) concentrations that exceed air quality regulations in winter due to weak dispersion caused by strong atmospheric inversions, local emissions, and the unique chemistry occurring under the cold and dark conditions. Here, we report on observations from the winters of 2020 and 2021, motivated by our pilot study that showed exceptionally high concentrations of fine particle hydroxymethanesulfonate (HMS) or related sulfur(IV) species (e.g., sulfite and bisulfite). We deployed online particle-into-liquid sampler-ion chromatography (PILS-IC) in conjunction with a suite of instruments to determine HMS precursors (HCHO, SO2) and aerosol composition in general, with the goal to characterize the sources and sinks of HMS in wintertime Fairbanks. PM2.5 HMS comprised a significant fraction of PM2.5 sulfur (26-41%) and overall PM2.5 mass concentration of 2.8-6.8% during pollution episodes, substantially higher than what has been observed in other regions, likely due to the exceptionally low temperatures. HMS peaked in January, with lower concentrations in December and February, resulting from changes in precursors and meteorological conditions. Strong correlations with inorganic sulfate and organic mass during pollution events suggest that HMS is linked to processes responsible for poor air quality episodes. These findings demonstrate unique aspects of air pollution formation in cold and humid atmospheres.


Subject(s)
Air Pollutants , Air Pollution , Aerosols/chemistry , Air Pollutants/analysis , Air Pollution/analysis , Alaska , Environmental Monitoring/methods , Particulate Matter/analysis , Pilot Projects , Seasons , Sulfur
4.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 12(19): 4593-4599, 2021 May 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33971093

ABSTRACT

Studies of vapor phase nucleation have largely been restricted to one of two limiting cases-nucleation controlled by a substantial free energy barrier or the collisional limit where the barrier is negligible. For weakly bound systems, exploring the transition between these regimes has been an experimental challenge, and how nucleation evolves in this transition remains an open question. We overcome these limitations by combining complementary Laval expansion experiments, providing new particle formation data for carbon dioxide over a uniquely broad range of conditions. Our experimental data together with a kinetic model using rate constants from high-level quantum chemical calculations provide a comprehensive picture of new particle formation as nucleation transitions from a barrier-dominated process to the collisional limit.

5.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 23(8): 4517-4529, 2021 Feb 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33595558

ABSTRACT

Large scale molecular dynamics simulations of the homogeneous nucleation of carbon dioxide in an argon atmosphere were carried out at temperatures between 75 and 105 K. Extensive analyses of the nucleating clusters' structural and energetic properties were performed to quantify these details for the supersonic nozzle experiments described in the first part of this series [Dingilian et al., Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2020, 22, 19282-19298]. We studied ten different combinations of temperature and vapour pressure, leading to nucleation rates of 1023-1025 cm-3 s-1. Nucleating clusters possess significant excess energy from monomer capture, and the observed cluster temperatures during nucleation - on both sides of the critical cluster size - are higher than that of the carrier gas. Despite strong undercooling with respect to the triple point, most clusters are clearly liquid-like during the nucleation stage. Only at the lowest simulation temperatures and vapour densities, clusters containing over 100 molecules are able to undergo a second phase transition to a crystalline solid. The formation free energies retrieved from the molecular dynamics simulations were used to improve the classical nucleation theory by introducing a Tolman-like term into the classical liquid-drop model expression for the formation free energy. This simulation-based theory predicts the simulated nucleation rates perfectly, and improves the prediction of the experimental rates compared to self-consistent classical nucleation theory.

6.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 22(34): 19282-19298, 2020 Sep 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32815933

ABSTRACT

We studied the homogeneous nucleation of carbon dioxide in the carrier gas argon for concentrations of CO2 ranging from 2 to 39 mole percent using three experimental methods. Position-resolved pressure trace measurements (PTM) determined that the onset of nucleation occurred at temperatures between 75 and 92 K with corresponding CO2 partial pressures of 39 to 793 Pa. Small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) measurements provided particle size distributions and aerosol number densities. Number densities of approximately 1012 cm-3, and characteristic times ranging from 6 to 13 µs, resulted in measured nucleation rates on the order of 5 × 1017 cm-3 s-1, values that are consistent with other nucleation rate measurements in supersonic nozzles. Finally, we used Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy to identify that the condensed CO2 particles were crystalline cubic solids with either sharp or rounded corners. Molecular dynamics simulations, however, suggest that CO2 forms liquid-like critical clusters before transitioning to the solid phase. Furthermore, the critical clusters are not in thermal equilibrium with the carrier gas. Comparisons with nucleation theories were therefore made assuming liquid-like critical clusters and incorporating non-isothermal correction factors.

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