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Sprayed Water Microdroplets Are Able to Generate Hydrogen Peroxide Spontaneously.

Masoud Ayatollahi MehrgardiMohammad MofidfarRichard N Zare
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2022)
Ultrapure N 2 gas was bubbled through water, and the humidified output containing undetectable concentrations of ozone filled a closed chamber in which 18 MΩ-cm water was sprayed through a silica capillary to form microdroplets. Analysis of the collected microdroplets by NMR spectroscopy showed the presence of hydrogen peroxide at a concentration level ranging from 0.3 to 1.5 μM depending on the flow conditions. This was confirmed using a spectrofluorometric assay. We suggest that this finding establishes that when sprayed to form microdroplets, water has the ability to produce hydrogen peroxide by itself. When the N 2 gas is replaced by compressed air or O 2 gas, the concentration of hydrogen peroxide is found to increase, indicating that gas-surface interactions with O 2 in aqueous microdroplets promote the formation of hydrogen peroxide.
Keyphrases
  • hydrogen peroxide
  • nitric oxide
  • room temperature
  • high throughput
  • particulate matter