
Heterogeneous formation of nitrous acid (HONO) on soot aerosol particles
Author(s) -
Kalberer M.,
Ammann M.,
Arens F.,
Gäggeler H. W.,
Baltensperger U.
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/1999jd900141
Subject(s) - nitrous acid , aerosol , soot , relative humidity , particle (ecology) , chemistry , troposphere , photochemistry , sunrise , environmental chemistry , inorganic chemistry , meteorology , organic chemistry , combustion , physics , oceanography , geology
The reaction of nitrogen dioxide (NO 2 ) to nitrous acid (HONO) on suspended soot aerosol particles was investigated using NO 2 labeled with 13 N (a radioactive isotope with a half‐life of 10.0 min) at low concentrations of 2–115 ppb. HONO is thought to be an important compound in the troposphere since it is accumulating during the night and photolyzed in the morning after sunrise, producing OH, the most important oxidant in the troposphere. On soot, NO 2 was rapidly reduced to HONO, presumably by a reactive surface site on the soot particle surface. No HNO 3 was formed as a reaction product, indicating that a disproportionation of NO 2 to HONO and HNO 3 with surface‐adsorbed water is not the dominant process on soot. The reaction rate is drastically reduced after the first few seconds because of consumption of the reactive surface sites giving a maximum of ∼1 × 10 15 HONO molecules cm −2 particle surface area. For a reaction time of 20 s the amount of HONO increased with increasing relative humidity up to 30%, showing that H 2 O is necessary for the reaction. Above 40% relative humidity the HONO production decreased again because of competition of H 2 O adsorbing on the particle surface. In aging experiments, O 3 oxidized the same particle surface sites as NO 2 , but simultaneous mixing of O 3 , NO 2 , and the aerosol showed that the O 3 oxidation is slower than the fast reaction of NO 2 to HONO. It is concluded that the NO 2 to HONO reaction on soot rapidly saturates and is not the main source of HONO in the polluted boundary layer.