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Molecular Analysis of Secondary Brown Carbon Produced from the Photooxidation of Naphthalene.

Kyla SiemensAna C MoralesQuan-Fu HeChunlin LiAnusha Priyadarshani Silva HettiyaduraYinon RudichAlexander Laskin
Published in: Environmental science & technology (2022)
We investigate the chemical composition of organic light-absorbing components, also known as brown carbon (BrC) chromophores, formed in a proxy of anthropogenic secondary organic aerosol generated from the photooxidation of naphthalene ( naph -SOA) in the absence and presence of NO x . High-performance liquid chromatography equipped with a photodiode array detector and electrospray ionization high-resolution mass spectrometer is employed to characterize naph -SOA and its BrC components. We provide molecular-level insights into the chemical composition and optical properties of individual naph -SOA components and investigate their BrC relevance. This work reveals the formation of strongly absorbing nitro-aromatic chromophores under high-NO x conditions and describes their degradation during atmospheric aging. NO x addition enhanced the light absorption of naph -SOA while reducing wavelength-dependence, as seen by the mass absorption coefficient (MAC) and absorption Ångström exponent (AAE). Optical parameters of naph -SOA generated under low- and high-NO x conditions showed a range of values from MAC OM 405nm ∼ 0.12 m 2 g -1 and AAE 300-450nm ∼ 8.87 (low-NO x ) to MAC OM 405nm ∼ 0.19 m 2 g -1 and AAE 300-450nm ∼ 7.59 (high-NO x ), consistent with "very weak" and "weak" BrC optical classes, respectively. The weak-BrC class is commonly attributed to biomass smoldering emissions, which appear to have optical properties comparable with the naph -SOA. Molecular chromophores contributing to naphthalene BrC absorption were identified with substantial nitro-aromatics, indicating that these species may be used as source-specific markers of BrC related to the anthropogenic emissions.
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