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Measured Saturation Vapor Pressures of Phenolic and Nitro-aromatic Compounds
Author(s) -
Thomas J. Bannan,
A. Murray Booth,
Benjamin Jones,
Simon O’Meara,
Mark H. Barley,
Ilona Riipinen,
Carl J. Percival,
David Topping
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
environmental science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.851
H-Index - 397
eISSN - 1520-5851
pISSN - 0013-936X
DOI - 10.1021/acs.est.6b06364
Subject(s) - vapor pressure , chemistry , knudsen number , saturation (graph theory) , nitro , aerosol , compressed fluid , analytical chemistry (journal) , organic chemistry , environmental chemistry , thermodynamics , physics , alkyl , mathematics , combinatorics
Phenolic and nitro-aromatic compounds are extremely toxic components of atmospheric aerosol that are currently not well understood. In this Article, solid and subcooled-liquid-state saturation vapor pressures of phenolic and nitro-aromatic compounds are measured using Knudsen Effusion Mass Spectrometry (KEMS) over a range of temperatures (298-318 K). Vapor pressure estimation methods, assessed in this study, do not replicate the observed dependency on the relative positions of functional groups. With a few exceptions, the estimates are biased toward predicting saturation vapor pressures that are too high, by 5-6 orders of magnitude in some cases. Basic partitioning theory comparisons indicate that overestimation of vapor pressures in such cases would cause us to expect these compounds to be present in the gas state, whereas measurements in this study suggest these phenolic and nitro-aromatic will partition into the condensed state for a wide range of ambient conditions if absorptive partitioning plays a dominant role. While these techniques might have both structural and parametric uncertainties, the new data presented here should support studies trying to ascertain the role of nitrogen containing organics on aerosol growth and human health impacts.

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