Smog chamber study on the NOx dependence of SOA from isoprene photo-oxidation: Implication on RO2 chemistry

  • Xinbei Xu
  • , Gehui Wang*
  • , Yining Gao
  • , Si Zhang
  • , Luyao Chen
  • , Rongjie Li
  • , Zheng Li
  • , Rui Li
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Atmospheric isoprene can be oxidized and form secondary organic aerosol (SOA) by OH, NO3 radicals and O3 simultaneously. Previous studies have reported a nonlinear relationship between isoprene-SOA mass yield and NOx levels, but the inherent mechanism is still not fully elucidated. In this work, the nonlinear dependence of isoprene SOA yield on NOx concentrations was investigated by performing a series of batch chamber experiments; both the gas and aerosol phase chemical species were characterized using HR-TOF-CIMS and HR-TOF-AMS, along with an Observation-Based Model incorporated with the Master Chemical Mechanism (OBM-MCM model) simulation. We found that NOx could influence the formations of low/extremely low/ultralow volatility organic compounds (L/EL/ULVOCs) by changing the RO2 fates, which are the critical compounds in nucleation and condensation on particle phase. The OBM-MCM model results revealed that when RO2 + HO2 is the dominant RO2 reaction pathway, the SOA yield increases with an increase in total loss rate of RO2 + HO2 and RO2 + NO. However, with a continuous increase in NOx concentration NO becomes the major sink for RO2, in which RO2 + NO would inhibit the formation of low volatile VOCs and thus reduce the SOA yield. By combing the smog chamber results and the OBM-MCM model estimations, we found that the isoprene SOA yield reaches the maximum when the ratio (β) of loss rate of [RO2 + HO2] to the total loss rate of [RO2 + HO2 and RO2 + NO] is 0.5, at which the reaction rates of RO2 + HO2 and RO2 + NO are equal and the [NO]/[HO2] ratio is about 2.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)752-760
Number of pages9
JournalJournal of Environmental Sciences (China)
Volume161
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 2026

Keywords

  • Highly oxygenated organic molecules
  • Isoprene
  • NO dependence
  • RO chemistry
  • SOA yield

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