Author(s)
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Surdu, Mihnea ; Lamkaddam, Houssni ; Wang, Dongyu S ; Bell, David M ; Xiao, Mao ; Lee, Chuan Ping ; Li, Dandan ; Caudillo, Lucía ; Marie, Guillaume ; Scholz, Wiebke ; Wang, Mingyi ; Lopez, Brandon ; Piedehierro, Ana A ; Ataei, Farnoush ; Baalbaki, Rima ; Bertozzi, Barbara ; Bogert, Pia ; Brasseur, Zoé ; Dada, Lubna ; Duplissy, Jonathan ; Finkenzeller, Henning ; He, Xu-Cheng ; Höhler, Kristina ; Korhonen, Kimmo ; Krechmer, Jordan E ; Lehtipalo, Katrianne ; Mahfouz, Naser G A ; Manninen, Hanna E ; Marten, Ruby ; Massabò, Dario ; Mauldin, Roy ; Petäjä, Tuukka ; Pfeifer, Joschka ; Philippov, Maxim ; Rörup, Birte ; Simon, Mario ; Shen, Jiali ; Umo, Nsikanabasi Silas ; Vogel, Franziska ; Weber, Stefan K ; Zauner-Wieczorek, Marcel ; Volkamer, Rainer ; Saathoff, Harald ; Möhler, Ottmar ; Kirkby, Jasper (CERN) ; Worsnop, Douglas R ; Kulmala, Markku ; Stratmann, Frank ; Hansel, Armin ; Curtius, Joachim ; Welti, André ; Riva, Matthieu ; Donahue, Neil M ; Baltensperger, Urs ; El Haddad, Imad |
Abstract
| The mechanistic pathway by which high relative humidity (RH) affects gas–particle partitioning remains poorly understood, although many studies report increased secondary organic aerosol (SOA) yields at high RH. Here, we use real-time, molecular measurements of both the gas and particle phase to provide a mechanistic understanding of the effect of RH on the partitioning of biogenic oxidized organic molecules (from α-pinene and isoprene) at low temperatures (243 and 263 K) at the CLOUD chamber at CERN. We observe increases in SOA mass of 45 and 85% with increasing RH from 10–20 to 60–80% at 243 and 263 K, respectively, and attribute it to the increased partitioning of semi-volatile compounds. At 263 K, we measure an increase of a factor 2–4 in the concentration of C10H16O2–3, while the particle-phase concentrations of low-volatility species, such as C10H16O6–8, remain almost constant. This results in a substantial shift in the chemical composition and volatility distribution toward less oxygenated and more volatile species at higher RH (e.g., at 263 K, O/C ratio = 0.55 and 0.40, at RH = 10 and 80%, respectively). By modeling particle growth using an aerosol growth model, which accounts for kinetic limitations, we can explain the enhancement in the semi-volatile fraction through the complementary effect of decreased compound activity and increased bulk-phase diffusivity. Our results highlight the importance of particle water content as a diluting agent and a plasticizer for organic aerosol growth. |