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Gas-to-Particle Partitioning of Cyclohexene- and α-Pinene-Derived Highly Oxygenated Dimers Evaluated Using COSMOtherm
Author(s) -
Noora Hyttinen,
Matthieu Wolf,
Matti Rissanen,
Mikael Ehn,
Otso Peräkylä,
Theo Kurtén,
Nønne L. Prisle
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
the journal of physical chemistry a
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.756
H-Index - 235
eISSN - 1520-5215
pISSN - 1089-5639
DOI - 10.1021/acs.jpca.0c11328
Subject(s) - cyclohexene , chemistry , volatility (finance) , pinene , aerosol , saturation (graph theory) , hydrogen bond , particle (ecology) , photochemistry , analytical chemistry (journal) , organic chemistry , molecule , oceanography , mathematics , combinatorics , financial economics , economics , geology , catalysis
Oxidized organic compounds are expected to contribute to secondary organic aerosol (SOA) if they have sufficiently low volatilities. We estimated saturation vapor pressures and activity coefficients (at infinite dilution in water and a model water-insoluble organic phase) of cyclohexene- and α-pinene-derived accretion products, "dimers", using the COSMO therm 19 program. We found that these two property estimates correlate with the number of hydrogen bond-donating functional groups and oxygen atoms in the compound. In contrast, when the number of H-bond donors is fixed, no clear differences are seen either between functional group types (e.g., OH or OOH as H-bond donors) or the formation mechanisms (e.g., gas-phase radical recombination vs liquid-phase closed-shell esterification). For the cyclohexene-derived dimers studied here, COSMO therm 19 predicts lower vapor pressures than the SIMPOL.1 group-contribution method in contrast to previous COSMO therm estimates using older parameterizations and nonsystematic conformer sampling. The studied dimers can be classified as low, extremely low, or ultra-low-volatility organic compounds based on their estimated saturation mass concentrations. In the presence of aqueous and organic aerosol particles, all of the studied dimers are likely to partition into the particle phase and thereby contribute to SOA formation.

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