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Experimental investigation of chamber‐dependent radical sources
Author(s) -
Carter W. P. L.,
Atkinson R.,
Winer A. M.,
Pitts J. N.
Publication year - 1982
Publication title -
international journal of chemical kinetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.341
H-Index - 68
eISSN - 1097-4601
pISSN - 0538-8066
DOI - 10.1002/kin.550141003
Subject(s) - chemistry , radical , irradiation , humidity , photodissociation , environmental chamber , volume (thermodynamics) , analytical chemistry (journal) , trace gas , hydroxyl radical , radiochemistry , photochemistry , environmental chemistry , thermodynamics , organic chemistry , nuclear physics , physics
While environmental chamber data have been widely used to generate and validate computer models of the chemistry occurring in polluted atmospheres, the effects of the chambers on the gas‐phase chemistry being studied have been poorly characterized. In order to investigate such chamber effects, a series of NO x —air irradiations, with trace levels of organics present to monitor OH radical concentrations, have been carried out in four different environmental chambers (ranging in volume from ∼100 to 40,000 L) at varying temperatures, humidities, pressures, and reaction conditions. In addition, a number of control experiments have been carried out to validate the technique for measuring OH radical levels in these irradiations. The data show that unknown sources of OH radicals are present in all of the chambers studied. The data are consistent with the presence of two distinct radical sources: (1) the photolysis of initially present HONO, whose importance increases with increasing NO 2 /NO concentration ratios, but which is a minor contributor to the overall radical flux after 30–60 min of irradiation, and (2) a constant (for these NO x —air irradiations) radical source which dominates beyond approximately the first 60 min of irradiation. The radical input rates, after the first ∽30–60 min of irradiation, are independent of the NO concentration, increase with increasing temperature, humidity, and NO 2 concentration, are proportional to light intensity, and are dependent on the chamber employed. Although the exact nature of this radical source is still undetermined, results of experiments reported here allow a number of possible mechanisms to be ruled, out, and these are discussed.