posted on 2018-08-28, 00:00authored bySophie Tomaz, Tianqu Cui, Yuzhi Chen, Kenneth G. Sexton, James M. Roberts, Carsten Warneke, Robert J. Yokelson, Jason D. Surratt, Barbara J. Turpin
We investigated the gas-phase chemical
composition of biomass burning
(BB) emissions and their role in aqueous secondary organic aerosol
(aqSOA) formation through photochemical cloud processing. A high-resolution
time-of-flight chemical ionization mass spectrometer using iodide
reagent ion chemistry detected more than 100 gas-phase compounds from
the emissions of 30 different controlled burns during the 2016 Fire
Influence on Regional and Global Environments Experiment (FIREX) at
the Fire Science Laboratory. Compounds likely to partition to cloudwater
were selected based on high atomic oxygen-to-carbon ratio and abundance.
Water solubility was confirmed by detection of these compounds in
water after mist chamber collection during controlled burns and analysis
using ion chromatography and electrospray ionization interfaced to
high-resolution time-of-flight mass spectrometry. Known precursors
of aqSOA were found in the primary gaseous BB emissions (e.g., phenols,
acetate, and pyruvate). Aqueous OH oxidation of the complex biomass
burning mixtures led to rapid depletion of many compounds (e.g., catechol,
levoglucosan, methoxyphenol) and formation of others (e.g., oxalate,
malonate, mesoxalate). After 150 min of oxidation (approximatively
1 day of cloud processing), oxalate accounted for 13–16% of
total dissolved organic carbon. Formation of known SOA components
suggests that cloud processing of primary BB emissions forms SOA.