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Laskin et al. “Reactions at interfaces as a source of sulfate formation in sea-salt particles” Science, 301, 340 – 344, 2003 Roland von Glasow
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Idea of paper Sulfur cycle and sea salt aerosol History of the paper The paper and the comments to it Outline
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OH reacts with Cl - at surface of sea salt aerosol: 2(OH + Cl - ) Cl 2 + 2 OH - additional OH - keeps sea salt pH high high pH favors aqueous S(IV) + O 3 and therefore increases nss-SO 4 2- in sea salt but decreases SO 2 in the gas phase Idea of paper
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Sulfur cycle and sea salt aerosol History of the paper The paper and the comments to it Outline
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Some terms DMS dimethyl sulfidebiogenic S from ocean S(IV) sum of: SO 2, HSO 3 -, SO 3 2- intermediate product S(VI) sum of: H 2 SO 4, HSO 4 -, SO 4 2- final products; important aerosol constituent MSA methyl sulfonic acidsemi-final product; important aerosol constituent nss-SO 4 2- non-sea-salt sulfate“S(VI)”
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Sulfur cycle volcanoes industry, traffic SO 2 H 2 SO 4 CCN radiation aqueous phase oxidation S(IV) S(VI): H 2 O 2, O 3, HOBr, HOCl cloud albedo nss-SO 4 2- DMS DMSO, SO 2, H 2 SO 4 sea salt
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pH dependence of S(IV) oxidation production of nss-SO 4 2-: O 3 + S(IV): only above pH ~ 6, but then very fast H 2 O 2 + S(IV) HOCl + S(IV) HOBr + S(IV) Seinfeld and Pandis, 1998
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pH of sea salt definition: pH = - log 10 [H + ] surface ocean water: pH ~ 8.1 sea salt pH buffer: –HCO 3 - + H + CO 2 + H 2 O –this consumes all acidity (H + ) until HCO 3 - is depleted, only then the aerosol pH starts changing uptake of acids like HNO 3, H 2 SO 4, HCl decrease pH rapidly sea salt pH function of particle age and size “auto-acidification” of young sea salt by old sea salt via HCl additionally “acid displacement”: –H 2 SO 4 + Cl - HSO 4 - + HCl –HNO 3 + Cl - NO 3 - + HCl
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pH determinations indirect (acid balance): –Bermuda, “moderately polluted”, pH of super-micron aerosol: 3.5 – 4.5 –Hawaii, “clean”, pH of sub-micron aerosol: 2.6 – 5.3, super- micron aerosol: 4.5 – 5.4 –East Coast of US, “moderately polluted – polluted”, sub- micron aerosol: 1.5 – 2, super-micron aerosol 2 – 3.5 direct (on minimally diluted filter extracts): –East Coast of US, “moderately polluted – polluted”, sub- micron aerosol: (2.5), super-micron aerosol 3 - 4 however: analytics require sampling times of >12h Keene and Savoie (1998,1999), Pszenny et al. (2004), Keene et al. (2004)
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Idea of paper Sulfur cycle and sea salt aerosol History of the paper The paper and the comments to it Outline
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Oum, Lakin, DeHaan, Brauers, Finlayson-Pitts, Science, 1998, 279, 74-77 lab study: “molecular chlorine is generated from the photolysis of ozone in the presence of sea salt” O 3 + hv + sea salt … Cl 2 Cl potentially important in atmosphere for oxidation of CH 4 and many NMHCs however: the proposed mechanism cannot work under atmospheric conditions see e.g. the rejected comment by Rolf Sander Oum et al.
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Knipping, Lakin, Foster, Jungwirth, Tobias, Gerber, Dabdub, Finlayson-Pitts, Science, 2000, 288, 301- 306 lab study, molecular dynamics modeling, and kinetic modeling only detection of gas phase products new mechanism proposed: 2 (OH + Cl - ) Cl 2 + 2 OH - (on surface) “daytime Cl conc are in good agreement with estimates based on NMHC destruction…” Knipping et al.
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+ + Formation of Hydroxyl Radicals Ozone: O 3 Molecular Oxygen: O 2 Excited Oxygen Atom: O( 1 D) Water Vapor: H 2 O Hydroxyl Radical: OH Add NaCl particles to chamber Add humid air to a relative humidity above NaCl deliquescence point CE M MC T water regulated temperature control CPC DMA gas inlet P, T, %RH 560L Stainless Steel and Aluminum Chamber FTIR Differential Optical Absorption Spectroscopy (DOAS) Aerosol Generation and Measurement Atmospheric Pressure Ionization Mass Spec (API-MS) Spectrometer Q1Q3 Xe lam p photolysis lamps Spectrometer Aerosol Chamber (Top View) Add ozone Photolyze at 254 nm (generate OH radicals) Measure gaseous reactants and products using FTIR, DOAS, and API- MS. The Experiments Eladio Knipping
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Molecular Dynamics Simulations of NaCl / H 2 O Possibility for Surface Chemistry? Snapshot of the open surface of an infinite “slab” consisting of 96 NaCl and 864 water molecules per unit cell. Model predicted surface coverage: 11.9% Cl - <0.2% Na + Picture Courtesy of Pavel Jungwirth and Douglas Tobias Eladio Knipping
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O 3, H 2 O 2 OH O 3, H 2 O 2 OH + Cl – Known Aqueous Phase Chemistry Cl 2 Potential Surface Reactions OH Cl – + OH Cl – Cl – OHO3O3 2 OH – Cl 2 Proposed Mechanism for Cl 2 Production OH Cl – + Cl – → Cl 2 – + OH – Eladio Knipping
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Jungwirth and Tobias, J. Phys. Chem. B, 2000, 104, 7702-7706 2001, 105, 10468-10472 2002, 106, 6361-6373 more detailed molecular dynamics modeling polarizability of halides is reason for surface segregation Jungwirth and Tobias
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J&T, 2001 J&T, 2002
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Knipping and Dabdub, J. Geophys. Res., 2002, 107, paper no. 4360 very detailed modeling of lab experiment: current knowledge not enough to explain lab results, proposed reaction: 2 (OH + Cl - ) Cl 2 + 2 OH - (on surface) “contribution of interfacial mechanism to chloride deficits measured in the atmosphere is minimal” Knipping and Dabdub
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Idea of paper Sulfur cycle and sea salt aerosol History of the paper The paper and the comments to it Outline
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Laskin, Gaspar, Wang, Hunt, Cowin, Colson, Finlayson- Pitts, Science, 2003, 301, 340-344 lab studies of deliquesced NaCl that was deposited on a filter, 3800 ppm O 3, 81% rh, several hours reaction time only detection of particulate products proposed reaction: 2 (OH + Cl - ) Cl 2 + 2 OH - surface mechanism as source of alkalinity “back of the envelope” calculations and speculations about atmospheric implications Laskin et al.
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unreacted NaCl reacted NaCl
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Laskin et al. unreacted NaCl reacted NaCl Cl : Na O : Na esp. small but also supermicron particles lose Cl and gain O:
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“in the MBL the NaOH generated in this reaction will provide a previously unrecognized buffering mechanism” buffering more nss-SO 4 2- formation in sea salt rapid deposition of sea salt smaller climate effect of SO 2 Laskin et al.: main idea
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regarding unexplained large Cl - depletion in measurements of sea salt aerosol: “ an alternative explanation is the mechanism proposed here, in which chlorine is displaced from the interface as Cl 2..” however: Knipping and Dabdub, 2002: “contribution of interfacial mechanism to chloride deficits measured in the atmosphere is minimal” Laskin et al.: other idea
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“However, measurements indicate that acidification rates are greater and pHs lower than those inferred and, consequently, the influence on S(VI) production was substantially overestimated.” HNO 3 is more important than H 2 SO 4 in acidifying sea salt in clean areas none of their samples ever indicated alkalinity production in sea salt aerosol (from polluted to clean environments) Keene and Pszenny: comment
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Sander, et al.: comment “Their extrapolation to atmospheric conditions, however, neglected to include gas-phase diffusion limitations. The proposed reaction is not important for regulating sea-salt aerosol pH and sulfate production in the marine troposphere.” neglect of gas phase diffusion limitations for OH uptake in “back of the envelope” calculations: 10x too fast model runs –base (--) –base with 2 (OH + Cl - ) Cl 2 + 2 OH - –base with 2 (OH + Cl - ) Cl 2 + 2 OH - and without kinetic limitations for uptake (--)
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Sander, et al.: comment base run including surface reaction without gas-phase diffusion
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Laskin et al.: reply pH: measurements often not in clean air, their idea doesn’t affect final pH only its temporal evolution NO 3 - is also enriched at interface and its photolysis might be an important OH source without gas phase limitations
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Summary of paper history Knipping et al., 2000: lab (only detection of gas phase), MD model, kinetic model: 2 (OH + Cl - ) Cl 2 + 2 OH - surface mechanism as source of Cl Knipping and Dabdub, 2002: more kinetic modeling Jungwirth and Tobias, 200x: more MD modeling Laskin et al., 2003: lab (only detection of particulate phase) 2 (OH + Cl - ) Cl 2 + 2 OH - surface mechanism as source of alkalinity 2 comments: i) pH of aerosol ii) kinetics, model results Oum et al., 1998: lab, O 3 + hv + sea salt … Cl 2
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Conclusions there is still a lot to do to understand sea salt pH surface reactions have a great potential oxidation of S(IV) in sea salt does decrease gas phase SO 2 and formation of new CCN via: –S(IV) + H 2 O 2 –S(IV) + O 3 –S(IV) + HOBr –S(IV) + HOCl and the deposition of sea salt particles
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