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Environmental Processes
Evidence for Gas-Surface Equilibrium Control of Indoor Nitrous Acid Douglas B. Collins, Rachel F. Hems, Shouming Zhou, Chen Wang, Eloi Grignon, Masih Alavy, Jeffrey A Siegel, and Jonathan P.D. Abbatt Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.8b04512 • Publication Date (Web): 11 Oct 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on October 15, 2018
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Environmental Science & Technology
Evidence for Gas-Surface Equilibrium Control of Indoor Nitrous Acid Douglas B. Collins,a,1,* Rachel F. Hems,a Shouming Zhou,a Chen Wang,a Eloi Grignon,a Masih Alavy,b Jeffrey A. Siegel,b,c Jonathan P.D. Abbatta
aDepartment
of Chemistry, University of Toronto; 80 St. George Street, Toronto, ON, Canada, M5S 3H6
bDepartment
of Civil and Mineral Engineering, University of Toronto; 35 St. George Street, Toronto, ON, Canada, M5S 1A4
cDalla
Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto; 223 College Street, Toronto, ON, Canada, M5T 1R4
*Corresponding Author: Douglas B. Collins,
[email protected] ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Environmental Science & Technology
1Now
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at: Department of Chemistry, Bucknell University; 1 Dent Drive, Lewisburg, PA 17837
KEYWORDS: nitrous acid, nitrogen dioxide, indoor chemistry, multiphase chemistry, chemical ionization mass spectrometry
1
ABSTRACT
2
Nitrous acid (HONO) is an important component of indoor air as a photolabile precursor
3
to hydroxyl radicals and has direct health effects. HONO concentrations are typically
4
higher indoors than outdoors, although indoor concentrations have proved challenging to
5
predict using box models. In this study, time-resolved measurements of HONO and NO2
6
in a residence showed that [HONO] varied relatively weakly over contiguous periods of
7
hours, while [NO2] fluctuated in association with changes in outdoor [NO2]. Perturbation
8
experiments were performed in which indoor HONO was depleted or elevated and were
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interpreted using a two-compartment box model. To reproduce the measurements,
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[HONO] had to be predicted using persistent source and sink processes that do not
11
directly involve NO2, suggesting that HONO was in equilibrium with indoor surfaces.
12
Production of gas phase HONO directly from conversion of NO2 on surfaces had a weak
13
influence on indoor [HONO] during the time of the perturbations. Highly similar temporal
14
responses of HONO and semi-volatile carboxylic acids to ventilation of the residence
15
along with the detection of nitrite on indoor surfaces support the concept that indoor
16
HONO mixing ratios are controlled strongly by gas-surface equilibrium.
17
TOC GRAPHIC
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Introduction
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Oxides of nitrogen are common air pollutants and are key participants in the production
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and cycling of atmospheric oxidants.1 Nitric oxide (NO) is a well-known primary emission
22
product of high temperature combustion. In the atmosphere, it can react with O3 or peroxy
23
radicals to form NO2, which can subsequently photolyze or react on surfaces.1 Within the
24
indoor environment, reactive uptake of NO2 to surfaces is an important removal pathway,2
25
given low levels of photons with sufficient energy for photolysis (λ < 400 nm) in regions
26
that are not directly sunlit.3,4 Uptake of NO2 to indoor surfaces can result in the
27
heterogeneous formation of nitrous acid (HONO):
28
𝑠𝑢𝑟𝑓𝑎𝑐𝑒
𝑁𝑂2
(R1)
𝐻𝑂𝑁𝑂
29
by various mechanisms including water-mediated disproportionation5 and one-electron
30
reduction reactions with electron donating organic compounds (e.g., phenols).6,7 NO2
31
reduction reactions with light-absorbing organic or semi-conducting inorganic substrates
32
can be photo-enhanced.7–13 Some NO2 surface uptake may also lead to adsorption,14
33
nitrate
34
generalized by R1 have been studied for decades5,16–19 on various types of
production,14
and/or
organo-nitrogen
formation.15
Altogether,
processes
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surfaces7,9,14,20–22 and have been incorporated into chemical models of the indoor
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environment with a variety of parameterized mechanisms.23–25 HONO mixing ratios
37
indoors (see Section S1) have been mostly attributed to R1, although the direct impact of
38
the NO2 uptake process on indoor [HONO] has been questioned.17,24 Understanding the
39
processes that regulate indoor [HONO] is important due to its direct inhalation toxicity and
40
impact as a source of hydroxyl radicals via UV photolysis.26–28
41
The nocturnal planetary boundary layer is an interesting analogue for the indoor
42
environment; HONO has been shown to accumulate in the boundary layer at night,
43
although the accumulation rate slows as [HONO] increases.29,30 Consequently, Stutz et
44
al.29 proposed that HONO is in a steady state in the dark, resulting from the co-existence
45
of competing source and sink processes. It is known that HONO can be lost from the gas
46
phase due to surface uptake,2,20,31–33 which likely dominates the sink term in the dark.
47
HONO can be produced by reactions of NO2 on surfaces,2,5,6,18,34 from nitrite35 on mineral
48
and salt-containing surfaces depending on surface acidity,36 and/or from displacement
49
due to uptake of stronger acids (e.g., HCl, HNO3) taken up from the gas phase.33 Spicer
50
et al.2 note that while net gas-phase HONO production is observed at high [NO2] within
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an indoor environment, an equilibrium process is most likely active, wherein the authors
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proposed that NO2- resides on surfaces as a precursor reservoir of gas-phase HONO.
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Wainman et al.17 suggested an effective Henry’s Law equilibrium to explain the co-
54
dependence of RH and slow emissions of gaseous HONO, suggesting that HONO (or
55
NO2-) may be in aqueous solution on surfaces. The concept that gaseous HONO is in
56
equilibrium with surfaces via R2 and R3 indicates that there are active source and sink
57
processes occurring simultaneously and continuously within buildings, and that levels of
58
gaseous HONO are not necessarily sensitive to NO2 uptake.
59
𝐻𝑂𝑁𝑂(𝑔)→𝐻𝑂𝑁𝑂(𝑠𝑢𝑟𝑓)
(R2)
60
𝐻𝑂𝑁𝑂(𝑠𝑢𝑟𝑓)→𝐻𝑂𝑁𝑂(𝑔)
(R3)
61
The present study uses high frequency measurements of trace gases paired with a
62
chemical box model to explore the processes influencing HONO and NO2 in a residence.
63
Measurements from periods without deliberate experimentation are presented, showing
64
the near steady state behavior of HONO. Experimental perturbations to [HONO] and
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[NO2] were conducted to explore the kinetics as the system relaxed from a perturbed state
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back to steady state. Box modeling of both positive and negative perturbations to [HONO]
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illustrate the need for equilibrium-type processes to re-establish a steady state
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concentration of gaseous HONO ([HONO]ss) within the residence. Similarity between
69
HONO and semivolatile organic acid behavior after residence ventilation, along with
70
detection of nitrite on indoor surfaces, provide support for the importance of gas-surface
71
equilibrium of HONO. We stress that the equilibrium processes R2 and R3 are distinct
72
from the initial sources of HONO indoors, which arise from R1 and primary combustion
73
emissions.
74
Materials and Methods
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A brief overview of the study location, experimental procedures, measurements, and
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model construction will be provided here with further details provided in the Supporting
77
Information (SI; Sections S2 to S7).
78
Location and Experiment Design
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Measurements were conducted in an inhabited, semi-detached residence in Toronto
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during November 2016. The residence was equipped with a forced air recirculation
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system (no ventilation) in which the fan was set to operate continuously; heating and
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cooling functions were not operated during the study. Three types of conditions were
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considered: non-experiment periods in which experimental activities were not being
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performed (but the home was inhabited by two people), outdoor air ventilation
85
experiments that rapidly reduced [HONO] in the kitchen, and combustion experiments
86
that provided a primary source of HONO to the indoor space. All experimental
87
perturbations to indoor air composition focused on the kitchen; instrumentation was
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located in a space adjacent to the kitchen (Figure S1). Ventilation experiments were
89
conducted by opening a door and windows in the kitchen to allow rapid indoor-outdoor air
90
exchange. A single research-grade cigarette (1R6F) was burned in the kitchen shortly
91
after closing the windows and doors; this activity will be largely neglected, as its effects
92
on nitrogen oxide chemistry were minor. Combustion experiments were performed using
93
an open flame stove burner with public utility natural gas fuel (Table S2). One large burner
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was operated during each experiment at maximum output with no hardware in contact
95
with the flame. When noted, a cast iron pot support and stainless steel pot containing tap
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water were placed over the flame.
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Trace gases were sampled from multiple locations during the study: kitchen, outside,
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and (during some periods) at the air return vent on the first floor of the building (Figure
99
S1), although most of this study focused on kitchen and outdoor measurements. Sample
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air was drawn through Teflon tubing (4.57 mm inner diameter; PFA) at each location to a
101
centralized set of 3-way Furon solenoid valves (Saint-Gobain). Valve states that
102
controlled the sampling location were automated and logged (1 Hz) using a custom
103
LabView control interface (National Instruments). Sample gas residence time in the tubing
104
was < 5 s. Zero air (Air grade zero 0.1; Linde [Canada], Inc.) was sampled by all
105
instruments for a period of 2.5 minutes every 60 minutes. After sampling zero air, all
106
instruments were allowed to stabilize for 2.5 minutes before resuming normal sampling.
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Trace Gas Measurements
108
NO and NO2 were measured using a chemiluminescence trace gas monitor (Thermo
109
Scientific, Model 42i). The instrument was equipped with a blue light converter (Air Quality
110
Design, Inc) for selective observation of NO2. Uncertainty in NO and NO2 was
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conservatively estimated to be ±10%. Interference from RO2• formed within the blue light
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converter37 may have caused NO2 measurements to represent a lower limit when photo-
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labile organic compounds (e.g., glyoxal) were present. CO2 and CO measurements
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(Thermo Scientific, Model 410i and Model 48i) were used to estimate the rates of air
115
exchange with outdoors and intra-zonal mixing within the building, respectively (Section
116
S5). Air introduced to an O3 instrument (Thermo Scientific, Model 49i) was passed
117
through a Teflon filter according to manufacturer specifications to limit interference from
118
aerosol particle scattering. Measurements of NO, NO2, O3, CO and CO2 were reported
119
as 60 second running average concentrations that were calculated on-board each
120
instrument. Temperature (T) and relative humidity (RH) were measured using data
121
logging sensors (HOBOware; Section S11).
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HONO was measured using a high-resolution time-of-flight chemical ionization mass
123
spectrometer (HR-ToF-CIMS)38 with acetate (CH3COO-) reagent ion.39 The reagent ion,
124
generated from acetic anhydride using a 210Po radioactive source (NRD, Model P-2021),
125
was introduced into the ion-molecule reaction chamber of the HR-ToF-CIMS. Resulting
126
CH3COO- ions can then abstract a proton from compounds that have a gas phase acidity
127
greater than acetate. Negative ion signal detected by the HR-ToF mass analyzer was
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saved with 0.5 Hz frequency. Since actuation of the switching valves induced a pressure
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fluctuation in the sample line, data collected within 20 s of a valve-switching event were
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disregarded. Data processing was performed with Tofware (Version 2.5.7; Aerodyne
131
Research, Inc.) operating within Igor Pro (Version 6.37; Wavemetrics, Inc.). Ion signals
132
were first normalized to the CH3COO- reagent ion signal (m/z 59.01), and then were
133
background corrected by subtracting the linearly interpolated zero gas measurements
134
that were conducted approximately every 30 mins. HONO was quantified by applying a
135
calibration to normalized, background corrected NO2- ion signal (m/z 45.99). Potential
136
interferences to NO2- ion signal for HONO detection, sources of measurement
137
uncertainty, and the calibration method are discussed in Section S4. Uncertainty in
138
[HONO] was estimated to be ±30%.
139
Box Model
140
A time-dependent two-compartment box model was constructed to investigate the
141
processes that control the temporal behavior of NO2 and HONO following perturbations
142
to indoor air composition (see also Section S7). Figure 1 shows the two-compartment
143
scheme with processes labeled using corresponding rate constant symbols. One box was
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attributed to the kitchen space, while the other box represents the remainder of the home.
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A two-compartment model was used in this study due to the need for a second air volume
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(‘the house’) to replenish the kitchen (see ‘Ventilation Experiments’). Carbon monoxide
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(CO) removal from the kitchen after cigarette combustion was used to estimate the inter-
148
zonal mixing rate (kmix). The indoor/outdoor air exchange rate (AER = kio) was estimated
149
using the decay of CO2 after perturbations. Mixing ratios were converted to absolute
150
concentration units using 2.461025 molecules m-3 for the total number density of
151
molecules in air. Both boxes were assigned a surface/volume ratio of 3 m-1.40 The model
152
was evaluated with a time step (t) of 0.01 s; model output was not sensitive to the time
153
step length. The number of processes affecting [HONO] and [NO2] was minimized and
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the number of independent assessments to constrain rate constants was maximized
155
(Table S4).
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157
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Figure 1. Two-compartment box model developed to study perturbation experiments.
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Rate constant symbols represent different physical and chemical exchange processes.
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Parameter descriptions are given in Table S4 and rate equations are provided in Table
161
S5.
162
Results and Discussion
163
Non-experiment Periods
164
During non-experiment periods, the inhabitants infrequently used the gas stove, which
165
produces NO2 and HONO. NO2 was mostly supplied to the indoor environment through
166
exchange with outdoor air. Similar to prior observations in buildings (Table S1), [HONO]
167
was 3 – 14.2 ppb (mean = 5.3 ppb; mode = 4.5 ppb; Figure 2a). The time-resolved
168
measurements reveal remarkable stability in [HONO] over periods of hours, suggesting
169
that it was in a near-steady state with balanced source and sink rates, when not perturbed
170
by occupant activities (e.g., ventilation or combustion).24,41 During these same non-
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experiment periods, indoor [NO2] varied to a much larger degree (3 – 70 ppb), responding
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mainly to changes in outdoor [NO2] (Figure 2b). O3 mixing ratios were generally less than
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10 ppb indoors, which was lower than or similar to outdoors. [NO] was highly variable and
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tracked the outdoor concentration closely, indicating that it was unreactive indoors, which
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is consistent with low indoor [O3].
176
Mixing ratios of HONO less than 3 ppb were rarely observed (see Section S4 for
177
discussion of possible instrumental interferences). [HONO] was largely independent of
178
[NO2], with the exception of 18 Nov (Figure 3). Measurements on 18 Nov indicate high
179
outdoor [HONO] and an indoor RH (36 – 40%) that was higher than the remainder of the
180
study period (RH = 28-35%). A linear least squares fit to the data prior to 18 Nov showed
181
that [HONO] and [NO2] were weakly correlated (r2 = 0.3, slope = 0.13). Data with [NO2] >
182
20 ppb and [HONO] > 7.5 ppb (Figure 3) were acquired during non-experiment use of the
183
gas stove by inhabitants. Neglecting inhabitant stove use resulted in even weaker linear
184
correlation between HONO and NO2 (r2 = 0.06, slope = 0.05).
185
Overall, the insensitivity of [HONO] to changes in [NO2] suggests that formation of
186
HONO is not controlled by incremental changes in the gas-phase concentration of NO2,
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although a direct coupling is often included in models.23–25 In another study, [HONO] was
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not proportional to [NO2], and temporal trends were modeled by invoking a saturation of
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reaction sites for NO2 on indoor surfaces.24 Such an adjustment to the parameterized
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mechanism in this prior work dampened the sensitivity of HONO to NO2, but the predicted
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[HONO] was still more sensitive to changes in [NO2] than the observations. Overall, our
192
observations of slow variations in HONO mixing ratios during non-experiment periods
193
suggests that a set of processes results in a HONO steady state within the building and
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that changes in [HONO] were buffered against dynamic (minute-to-hour scale) changes
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in [NO2].
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Figure 2. (a.) Histogram of [HONO] in the kitchen for all non-experiment periods. (b.)
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Histogram of [NO2] in the kitchen for all non-experiment periods. (c.) Time series of trace
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gas measurements inside and outside the residence during all non-experiment periods.
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Times are given in the Universal Time Coordinate (UTC = local time + 5 h).
201 202
Figure 3. Comparison of [HONO] and [NO2] in the kitchen during all non-experiment
203
periods in which simultaneous HONO and NO2 measurements were available. [HONO]
204
was averaged to 1-minute intervals and colorized based on the sampling date (in UTC).
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Combustion Experiments
206
If HONO is in an equilibrium with a precursor reservoir, then external perturbations to
207
[HONO] and [NO2] can provide information on processes that establish the steady state.
208
Combustion is a known source of HONO and NO2, and has been implicated in elevated
209
indoor [HONO] in prior studies.2,26,42,43 In this study, [HONO] was deliberately elevated
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using a gas burner stove. Relaxation of HONO toward its steady state concentration was
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monitored and modeled to investigate chemical processes. After operating the gas burner
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for 12 – 25 minutes, [HONO] reached 20 – 50 ppb and [NO2] reached 40 – 50 ppb in the
213
kitchen. During experiments where concentrations of HONO and NO2 were measured in
214
the kitchen and at the air vent, both indoor locations in the home had near identical
215
concentrations within 10 minutes of initiating combustion (Figure S5), due to the rapidity
216
of inter-zonal mixing within the main floor of the building. Indeed, given that the
217
recirculating fan within the building ventilation system was operated continuously
218
throughout the study, it is likely that the measured levels of HONO and NO2 existed
219
throughout the residence.
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Concentrations of both gases began to decrease immediately upon extinguishing the
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open flame (Figure 4). [NO2] could be modeled well when including indoor/outdoor air
222
exchange, inter-zonal mixing, and deposition to surfaces (krem,NO2; the sole adjustable
223
parameter influencing modeled [NO2]). The probability that a collision between an NO2
224
molecule and an indoor surface will lead to an uptake event, known as the effective uptake
225
coefficient (γ), that corresponds to krem,NO2 can be evaluated using Equation 1.
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4𝑘𝑟𝑒𝑚,𝑁𝑂2𝑉
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𝛾𝑁𝑂2 =
227
where V is the volume of air, S is the indoor surface area, and ωNO2 is the thermal velocity
228
of NO2 (at 25 °C). The rates of chemical removal of NO2 determined during combustion
229
experiments (Tables S4 and S5; krem,NO2 = (2.7 – 6.5)10-4 s-1; γNO2 = (1 – 2.3)10-6) were
230
similar to or slightly greater than prior studies.2,6,24,44,45
𝜔𝑁𝑂2𝑆
[Eq. 1]
231
In order to find the best measurement-model agreement for HONO, the aforementioned
232
air exchange processes must be accompanied by explicit inclusion of competing HONO
233
production (ksrc,HONO) and removal (krem,HONO) processes that represent an equilibrium with
234
a condensed phase reservoir (e.g. nitrite) and produce a steady state for HONO. The
235
competing processes are implemented in the box model as a first order removal of
236
gaseous HONO (γHONO = (6.2 – 6.9)10-6), and a zero-order production of gaseous
237
HONO. The use of a zero-order process is analogous to a first order production process
238
that has a large and practically invariant reservoir of precursor. As discussed below and
239
in the SI (Section S12), samples collected from surfaces in the residence indicate the
240
presence of HONO and/or nitrite, providing important support for an equilibrium source of
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gaseous HONO indoors. Model-measurement agreement was improved by a small
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degree if we add some degree of chemical formation of HONO via NO2 uptake (kHONO) as
243
well.
244
The potential importance of equilibrium-type processes to indoor HONO concentrations
245
has been suggested previously by Spicer et al.2 and was discussed by Lee et al.46 but
246
has not been explored in detail. To illustrate the sensitivity of the model to each HONO-
247
related process, model output shown in Figure 4 was generated while eliminating some
248
or all of the chemical processes used to predict [HONO]. Omission of all chemical
249
processes such that only inter-zonal and indoor/outdoor air exchange processes remain
250
active (dashed gray line, ‘air exchange only’) clearly deviates from the observations.
251
Eliminating the direct production of gas phase HONO from NO2 uptake (kHONO = 0; black
252
dashed line) causes the model to slightly underestimate [HONO] and slightly overestimate
253
the overall rate of HONO removal from the kitchen. When the competing source and sink
254
(equilibrium) processes that lead to [HONO]ss were omitted (ksrc,HONO = 0 and krem,HONO =
255
0; solid gray line), an increase in [HONO] was predicted by the model after the flame was
256
extinguished but was not observed. Clearly, the pair of surface-based source and sink
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processes were key elements of the model, while direct chemical production from NO2
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uptake provided a weaker contribution to measurement-model agreement.
259 260
Figure 4. Measurements (markers) and model calculations (lines) of trace gases during
261
a combustion experiment. Replicate experiments can be found in Figure S6.
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Ventilation Experiments
263
Ventilation experiments were performed to complement the perturbations arising from
264
using the stove. Upon ventilation with outdoor air, [HONO] in the kitchen was reduced to
265
3 ppb, and immediately began increasing toward [HONO]ss of 6 ppb when ventilation
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ceased (Figure 5). Stable [HONO] was observed within 15-30 minutes ( ~ 300 s).
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Meanwhile, [NO2] increased when outdoor air was introduced to the kitchen. Since both
268
[NO2] and [O3] were greater in outdoor air, NO2 was both introduced directly from outdoors
269
and produced by reaction of O3 with NO present indoors (allowing indoor [NO2] to briefly
270
exceed its outdoor concentration). [NO2] decreased upon cessation of ventilation, but did
271
so at a slower rate than the observed increase in HONO. Temporal profiles and mixing
272
ratios of HONO and NO2 in our ventilation experiments closely resemble observations
273
from previous studies in residences and a classroom.2,28,41,43 In addition, the different time
274
constants for NO2 and HONO relaxation clearly illustrate a lack of coupling between
275
processes that control these species’ gas phase abundances.
276
Relaxation back to a steady state was simulated to probe the processes that contribute
277
to this temporal behavior. Model output in Figure 5a represents calculated concentrations
278
in the kitchen. In the same manner as the combustion experiments, the model-
279
measurement agreement was found for NO2 by including air exchange processes (kio and
280
kmix) and uptake to surfaces (krem,NO2). Only krem,NO2 was adjusted to find agreement with
281
measurements. The modest deviation of the model from the data may result from a time-
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and/or concentration-varying krem,NO2 value, or may be due to uncertainties in physical
283
mixing processes (e.g., variability in AER, intra-zonal transport within the kitchen).
284
Analysis of the ventilation data with the box model indicates that γNO2 was 1×10-6.
285
[HONO] could be predicted well in the kitchen by including only physical exchange
286
processes (kio and kmix), as long as a constant value for [HONO]ss was applied to the
287
‘house’ compartment (kHONO, ksrc,HONO, and krem,HONO were set to zero in both boxes).
288
When modeling ventilation experiments, [HONO]ss in the ‘house’ compartment was held
289
constant at 6 ppb, which was the measured [HONO]ss in the kitchen at the end of the
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ventilation experiment (see also Section S8). Setting a constant [HONO]ss for the ‘house’
291
represents an inferred source of HONO from a large reservoir of precursor that existed
292
consistently within the building in order to maintain mass balance. It was assumed that
293
ventilation using the windows and door near the kitchen did not necessarily ventilate the
294
rest of the house. Air exchange between compartments in the model (Figure 1, kmix)
295
allowed the concentration of HONO in the kitchen to achieve [HONO]ss in a short period
296
of time. Incorporation of an upper limit rate for HONO production directly from NO2 (kHONO)
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only provided a small change to the model results (Figure 5a, dashed line).
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We note that although cigarette emissions were released into the kitchen from t = 960
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– 1250 s, production of nitrogen oxide species during the cigarette burning episodes were
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very small compared to the perturbation from ventilating the kitchen (Section S8).
301 302
Figure 5. Measurements (markers) and model calculations (lines) of trace gases in the
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kitchen during ventilation experiments. The ‘HONO+chem’ model run (left panel)
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simulates HONO production by including kHONO (Figure 1). The scale for HCOOH (right
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panel) is presented in uncalibrated, arbitrary signal units. The time of day at t = 0 s for the
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experiment shown is 14:45 (local time).
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The concept that HONO was in equilibrium with a precursor reservoir is supported by
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the similarity in behavior between the signals for HONO and formic acid (HCOOH), which
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has been long known to be a semi-volatile organic compound that maintains an
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equilibrium with indoor surfaces.47 The temporal trend in HCOOH overlays with HONO
311
closely (Figure 5b), suggesting similar mechanistic drivers behind the replenishment of
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both acids to the gas phase in the kitchen after the windows/door had been closed. Other
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alkyl monocarboxylic acids (propionic, butyric, pentanoic) followed similar trends (Figure
314
S9).
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Overall, the ventilation experiments illustrate a decoupling of the kinetic behavior
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between NO2 and HONO, such that the dynamics of these gases in the indoor space
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cannot be modeled using direct gas phase HONO production from NO2 uptake to
318
surfaces. Instead, in support of the combustion experiments, the results point to a large
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reservoir of HONO precursor on the inner surfaces of the residence that readily releases
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HONO to the gas phase, helping to re-establish steady state after a perturbation.
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Mechanistic Considerations for HONO Production
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The ultimate source of HONO in the indoor environment, apart from combustion, is
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presumably associated with the uptake of NO2 to surfaces (R1). Subsequent to formation
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via R1, the equilibrium processes R2 and R3 can then dominate the control of gaseous
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[HONO]. In particular, in both our ventilation and combustion experiments, a driving force
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for [HONO]ss was required in order to find measurement-model agreement. In the
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combustion case, when [HONO] was elevated in all zones of the residence, competing
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source and removal processes that help to re-establish the steady state were
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implemented explicitly in the model and were key components in achieving measurement-
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model agreement for temporal trends in [HONO] (Figure 4). In the ventilation case, when
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[HONO] was depleted in the kitchen, model-measurement agreement was achieved
332
mainly through inter-zonal mixing in which [HONO]ss in the ‘house’ box was taken to
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persist throughout the experiment and act as a source for the kitchen. In order to maintain
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mass balance of HONO, one must infer a responsive source of HONO to the ‘house’ box
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as the kitchen is replenished and approaches [HONO]ss on a scale of minutes. A more
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straightforward measurement-modeling comparison could be achieved in an indoor
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space with fewer defined zones where both types of cases could be represented with
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identical model construction. Still, further strong support for equilibrium control of gaseous
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HONO comes from the identical behavior of HCOOH, a well-known semi-volatile organic
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compound, during the ventilation experiments (Figure 5). It may be possible that the
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presence of the gas stove in the residence examined within the present study conditioned
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the surfaces to have a greater surface reservoir of the precursor to gaseous HONO,
343
although a direct comparison study with homes not containing gas stoves was beyond
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the scope of this work.
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Direct chemical production of gaseous HONO from NO2 uptake was weak. When the
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direct chemical production of gaseous HONO was included in the model for the ventilation
347
experiments, predicted HONO levels were higher than the measurements (Figure 5a). A
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similarly small influence of direct gaseous HONO formation from NO2 uptake was
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observed in the combustion experiments (Figure 4).
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The set of processes driving [HONO] proposed in this study help explain similar
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experiments reported in the literature where there is a rapid HONO increase after
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ventilation.2,28,41,43 For example, data from ventilation experiments performed during the
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SURFin campaign24,28 show temporal trends in [HONO] that approach a steady state and
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show similar HONO mixing ratios (~6 ppb). While investigators arrived at a model
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construct that uses a limitation to NO2 uptake to dampen the HONO production rate, the
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model retained more sensitivity to deliberate experimental additions of NO2 than the
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measurements indicated. The authors concluded that indoor gaseous HONO formation
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was generally not proportional to NO2,24 although some immediate HONO production did
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result from NO2 uptake, as has been observed previously.2 Hence, mechanisms used to
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simulate indoor [HONO] should be weakly sensitive to [NO2]; we propose one such
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mechanism in this study.
362
The Proposed HONO Reservoir
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Implementation of gas-surface equilibrium processes in the model implies that a
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precursor reservoir to gaseous HONO persists on indoor surfaces. Overall, we suggest
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that nitrite and/or HONO formed upon NO2 uptake may be dissolved in surface adsorbed
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water or sorbed to building materials. Alkaline materials, in particular, such as grout or
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concrete, could be of particular importance in the formation of nitrite.36,44 In addition to the
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kinetic studies described above, this proposal is supported by new measurements of at
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least 1012 nitrite ions cm-2 detected on various types of hard indoor finishes with some
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measurements larger than 1013 ions cm-2 (Section S12).
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An early study of HONO formation from NO2 uptake illustrated that the yield of gas
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phase HONO was reduced in environmental chambers that had not been cleaned via
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photo-oxidation.18 Such soiled reactor surfaces may be somewhat representative of the
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‘aged’ surfaces that exist in inhabited residences and could be conducive to the
375
accumulation of HONO or nitrite reservoirs. In laboratory studies, realistic building
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materials released HONO for extended periods after NO2 exposure ceased; this behavior
377
was enhanced with increased RH,17 suggesting that nitrite dissolved and accumulated in
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surface-bound water. Other studies of NO2 uptake to materials found indoors showed that
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nitrite accumulated on alkaline materials (e.g., concrete, wallboard paper)44 and that
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HONO deposited strongly to alkaline cleaning agents (likely as nitrite).9 Further, efficient
381
uptake of HONO from air to (alkaline) photocatalytic paint surfaces was suggested to
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result from rapid oxidation of the nitrite surface reservoir by the photocatalyst, shifting the
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balance of the multiphase equilibrium of HONO and nitrite.48 Overall, studies of HONO
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and NO2 chemistry have been conducted on many types of realistic, chemically-complex
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surfaces7,9,17,22 and simpler proxy materials,16,20,49 from which much has been learned
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about the mechanisms of NO2 uptake and HONO production. However, continued study
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of the gas phase and the condensed phase in the same experiments will enhance
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mechanistic insight and will clarify the degree to which multiphase equilibrium controls
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gaseous HONO mixing ratios. Overall, surface composition clearly has an important
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impact on HONO chemistry.26,27
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Outdoors, soils have been suggested to act as a HONO source depending on surface
392
pH.11,33,35,36,50 Changes to surface pH via uptake of strong acids from the gas phase (e.g.,
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HCl) may protonate nitrite on surfaces, resulting in a flux of HONO to the gas phase.16
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Sources of strong acids in the gas-phase include primary emissions from various indoor
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activities (e.g., cleaning, combustion)51,52 as well as secondary sources like
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heterogeneous reactions of NO2 with chloride salts, Cl radical reactions with organics,53
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and dark NOx chemistry.54 Recently, the tendency for ammonium nitrate aerosol to
398
evaporate and produce gaseous NH3 and HNO3 under warm and dry indoor conditions55
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has been observed during winter upon outdoor-to-indoor transport.56 Further
400
measurements of gaseous strong acids, along with inorganic nitrogen speciation and
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water content on realistic indoor surfaces, are warranted to gain a better understanding
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mechanistic aspects of this chemical system.
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The findings of the present study suggest that comprehensive indoor air chemistry
404
models require inclusion of an equilibrium or dynamic exchange of HONO between the
405
gas phase and a condensed-phase reservoir. This behavior needs be examined in a wide
406
variety of indoor spaces and for other semi-volatile species.
407 408
ASSOCIATED CONTENT
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Supporting Information. The following file is available free of charge at
410
http://pubs.acs.org.
411
Documentation of the building layout and conditions, HR-ToF-CIMS calibration and
412
uncertainty, natural gas fuel composition, air exchange rate determination, experimental
413
replicates, surface sampling of nitrite, and supplemental gas-phase organic acid
414
measurements (PDF).
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AUTHOR INFORMATION
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Corresponding Author
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*Douglas B. Collins, Department of Chemistry, Bucknell University, 1 Dent Drive,
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Lewisburg, PA 17837;
[email protected] 419
Present Address
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†Department of Chemistry, Bucknell University, 1 Dent Drive, Lewisburg, PA 17837
421
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
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Support was provided by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation (Chemistry of Indoor
423
Environments). The authors would like to thank Charles Weschler for useful
424
conversations and Jonathan Wang for help with trace gas analyzer calibrations.
425 426
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