Login / Signup

Enhanced Organic Nitrate Formation from Peroxy Radicals in the Condensed Phase.

Victoria P BarberLexy N LeMarYaowei LiJonathan W ZhengFrank N KeutschJesse H Kroll
Published in: Environmental science & technology letters (2024)
Organic alkoxy (RO) and peroxy (RO 2 ) radicals are key intermediates in multiphase atmospheric oxidation chemistry, though most of the study of their chemistry has focused on the gas phase. To better understand how radical chemistry may vary across different phases, we examine the chemistry of a model system, the 1-pentoxy radical, in three phases: the aqueous phase, the condensed organic phase, and the gas phase. In each phase, we generate the 1-pentoxy radical from the photolysis of n -pentyl nitrite, run the chemistry under conditions in which RO 2 radicals react with NO, and detect the products in real time using an ammonium chemical ionization mass spectrometer (NH 4 + CIMS). The condensed-phase chemistry shows an increase in formation of organic nitrate (RONO 2 ) from the downstream RO 2 +NO reaction, which is attributed to potential collisional and solvent-cage stabilization of the RO 2 -NO complex. We further observe an enhancement in the yield of carbonyl relative to hydroxy carbonyl products in the condensed phase, indicating changes to RO radical kinetics. The different branching ratios in the condensed phase impact the product volatility distribution as well as HO x -NO x chemistry, and may have implications for nitrate formation, aqueous aerosol formation, and radical cycling within atmospheric particles and droplets.
Keyphrases
  • nitric oxide
  • drug discovery
  • ionic liquid
  • risk assessment
  • cell proliferation
  • mass spectrometry
  • liquid chromatography