Publication date: August 2018
Source:Atmospheric Environment, Volume 186
Author(s): Armin Hansel, Wiebke Scholz, Bernhard Mentler, Lukas Fischer, Torsten Berndt
The performance of the novel ammonium chemical ionization time of flight mass spectrometer (NH4+-CI3–TOF) utilizing NH4+ adduct ion chemistry to measure first generation oxidized product molecules (OMs) as well as highly oxidized organic molecules (HOMs) was investigated for the first time. The gas-phase ozonolysis of cyclohexene served as a first test system. Experiments have been carried out in the TROPOS free-jet flow system at close to atmospheric conditions. Product ion signals were simultaneously observed by the NH4+-CI3-TOF and the acetate chemical ionization atmospheric pressure interface time of flight mass spectrometer (acetate-CI-API-TOF). Both instruments are in remarkable good agreement within a factor of two for HOMs. For OMs not containing an OOH group the acetate technique can considerably underestimate OM concentrations by 2–3 orders of magnitude. First steps of cyclohexene ozonolysis generate ten different main products, detected with the ammonium-CI3-TOF, comprising 93% of observed OMs. The remaining 7% are distributed over several minor products that can be attributed to HOMs, predominately to highly oxidized RO2 radicals. Summing up, observed ammonium-CI3-TOF products yield 5.6 × 109 molecules cm−³ in excellent agreement with the amount of reacted cyclohexene of 4.5 × 109 molecules cm−³ for reactant concentrations of [O3] = 2.25 × 1012 molecules cm−³ and [cyclohexene] = 2.0 × 1012 molecules cm−³ and a reaction time of 7.9 s. NH4+ adduct ion chemistry is a promising CIMS technology for achieving carbon-closure due to the unique opportunity for complete detection of the whole product distribution including also peroxy radicals, and consequently, for a much better understanding of oxidation processes.
Graphical abstract
https://ift.tt/2xtLLh2
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου