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Environmental Processes
Nitrogen-containing, light-absorbing oligomers produced in aerosol particles exposed to methylglyoxal, photolysis, and cloud cycling David O De Haan, Enrico Tapavicza, Matthieu Riva, Tianqu Cui, Jason Douglas Surratt, Adam C. Smith, Mary-Caitlin Jordan, Shiva Nilakantan, Marisol Almodovar, Tiffany N. Stewart, Alexia de Loera, Audrey C. De Haan, Mathieu Cazaunau, Aline Gratien, Edouard Pangui, and Jean-Francois Doussin Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b06105 • Publication Date (Web): 06 Mar 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on March 7, 2018
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Nitrogen-containing, light-absorbing oligomers
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produced in aerosol particles exposed to
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methylglyoxal, photolysis, and cloud cycling.
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David O. De Haan,*1 Enrico Tapavicza,*2 Matthieu Riva,3, # Tianqu Cui,3 Jason D. Surratt,3
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Adam C. Smith,2 Mary-Caitlin Jordan,2 Shiva Nilakantan,2 Marisol Almodovar,2 Tiffany N.
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Stewart,1 Alexia de Loera,1 Audrey C. De Haan,1 Mathieu Cazaunau,4 Aline Gratien,4
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Edouard Pangui,4 Jean-François Doussin4
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
1
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of San Diego, 5998 Alcala Park, San
Diego CA 92110 USA 2
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, California State University Long Beach, 1250
Bellflower Boulevard, Long Beach, CA, 90840, USA 3
Department of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, Gillings School of Global Public
Health, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, 27599 USA. 4
Laboratoire Interuniversitaire des Systèmes Atmosphériques (LISA), UMR7583, CNRS,
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Université Paris-Est-Créteil (UPEC) et Université Paris Diderot (UPD), Institut Pierre Simon
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Laplace (IPSL), 94010 Créteil, France
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#
Now at Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, CNRS, IRCELYON, F-69626, Villeurbanne,
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France
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*Corresponding_Authors,
[email protected], 1 619 260-6882,
[email protected],
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1 562 985-7830
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KEYWORDS: brown carbon, aqueous secondary organic aerosol formation, alpha-dicarbonyl,
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imine, imidazole, photolytic cloud processing, computational absorption spectra.
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ABSTRACT. Aqueous methylglyoxal chemistry has often been implicated as an important
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source of oligomers in atmospheric aerosol. Here we report on chemical analysis of brown
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carbon aerosol particles collected from cloud cycling / photolysis chamber experiments, where
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gaseous
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methylammonium sulfate seed particles. Eighteen N-containing oligomers were identified in the
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particulate phase by liquid chromatography / diode array detection / electrospray ionization high-
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resolution quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry. Chemical formulas were determined
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and, for 6 major oligomer products, MS2 fragmentation spectra were used to propose tentative
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structures and mechanisms.
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product structures by an ab initio second order algebraic-diagrammatic-construction / density
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functional theory approach. For five structures, matching calculated and measured absorption
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spectra suggest that they are dominant light-absorbing species at their chromatographic retention
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times. Detected oligomers incorporated methylglyoxal and amines, as expected, but also pyruvic
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acid, hydroxyacetone, and significant quantities of acetaldehyde. The finding that ~80% (by
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mass) of detected oligomers contained acetaldehyde, a methylglyoxal photolysis product,
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suggests that daytime methylglyoxal oligomer formation is dominated by radical addition
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mechanisms involving CH3CO*. These mechanisms are evidently responsible for enhanced
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browning observed during photolytic cloud events.
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Introduction
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methylglyoxal
and
methylamine
interacted
with
glycine,
ammonium
or
Electronic absorption spectra were calculated for six tentative
Methylglyoxal is believed to contribute significantly to the atmospheric formation of oligomerized1 and light-absorbing secondary organic aerosol (SOA) species2,
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via aqueous-
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phase reactions.4 Methylglyoxal uptake to clouds, however, is partly reversible: lab simulations
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of cloud droplet evaporation have shown that 65 to 80% of the methylglyoxal present in a droplet
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evaporates when the droplet dries.5, 6 Smaller drying-induced losses of aqueous organic species
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have been observed in field studies, especially at night.7 In aqueous aerosol particles, dissolved
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methylglyoxal forms oligomerized SOA through rapid self-reactions6, 8 or reactions with SO2,9
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ammonium salts,10,
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form products with low enough vapor pressures that they may remain in the aerosol phase.18
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Alternatively, evaporation of volatile compounds may be slowed19,
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formation causes the organic phase to solidify.21-24.
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other aldehydes,12,
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amine species,14 or oxidants.15-17 These reactions
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if extensive oligomer
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Prior studies of light-absorbing brown carbon (BrC) formed by aldehyde – ammonia reactions
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have found that it is quickly bleached when photolyzed in the aqueous-phase,25, 26 suggesting that
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atmospheric secondary BrC can form only at night. However, photolysis of BrC may lead to
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greater SOA formation due to photosensitization, a process where light-absorbing species absorb
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light and then trigger the oxidation of other species.27 In our recent study, ammonium sulfate
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(AS) and amine-containing seed particles exposed to methylglyoxal and methylamine gas and
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cloud processing became more light-absorbing in experiments with photolysis than in dark
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experiments.28 This effect was attributed to autocatalytic photosensitization, where the aqueous-
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phase photolysis of BrC produces radical species, which oligomerize with other species to form
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even greater amounts of BrC. Here, we report high-resolution mass spectrometric measurements
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of both the gas and aerosol phases in the autocatalytic photosensitization experiments, which
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demonstrate the formation of oligomerized aerosol-phase products and the gas/particle exchange
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of reactant and product species through multiple cloud cycles. We find that particle-phase
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oligomers in most experiments are dominated by methylglyoxal photolysis products, suggesting
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that aqueous radical addition reactions make large contributions to the formation of not only
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oligomers15 but also aerosol BrC.
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Methods
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CESAM chamber.
Methylglyoxal addition experiments in the pressure and temperature-
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controlled, stirred 4.2 m3 CESAM chamber29 have been described earlier.28 Briefly, different
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types of ammonium and amine-containing seed aerosol particles were generated from 1, 2, and
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10 mM aqueous solutions of AS, methylammonium sulfate (MAS, adjusted to pH 4 with
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H2SO4), or glycine, respectively, and then exposed to 1 to 7 ppm methylglyoxal gas. Gas-phase
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methylamine was present at 0.3 – 1.0 ppm in every experiment, added directly to AS seed
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experiments or equilibrating from aerosols or walls in MAS or glycine seed experiments,
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respectively. Cloud events lasting 3-10 min each were triggered by further additions of
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expansion-cooled water vapor, sometimes combined with lowering pressure in the humid
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chamber from 1.01 to 0.93 atm.
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controllable, cloud events were repeated to achieve a total cloud processing time of 15–18 min.
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per experiment Three xenon arc lamps illuminated the chamber for ~2 h during and after the last
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cloud event in each experiment.
Since the length of an individual cloud event was not
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Gas generation and quantitation. Aqueous solutions of methylglyoxal (Alfa-Aesar) were
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concentrated by pumping on a vacuum line until the entire solution was highly viscous. Gases
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released by gentle heating were then collected in an evacuated glass bulb and flushed with dry N2
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into the chamber.
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reaction time-of-flight mass spectrometry (PTR-TOF-MS, Kore Technology). Pure methylamine
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gas (Fluka, >99%) was added to reach 1 ppm in the chamber and quantified by PTR-TOF-MS.
Methylglyoxal was quantified by long path FTIR30 and proton-transfer
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Aerosol chemical characterization.
After each experiment, cloud-processed aerosol was
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collected without a denuder at constant pressure for ~14 h at 16 L min-1 onto a Teflon filter
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(Tisch, 1.0 m pore size). Addition of dry N2 during filter sampling caused RH and gas-phase
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organic species concentrations in the chamber to slowly drop by a factor of 10; thus, volatile,
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semivolatile, and reversibly-formed aqueous aerosol species had ample opportunity to evaporate.
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Filters were stored at -20 ºC under dark conditions until chemical analysis.
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characterization of the particles was performed by ultra-performance liquid chromatography
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interfaced to high-resolution quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry equipped with
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electrospray ionization (UPLC/ESI-HR-Q-TOFMS; 6520 Series, Agilent) operated in negative
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and positive ion modes. Filters were extracted with 22 mL of methanol (LC-MS Chromasolv-
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grade, Sigma-Aldrich) by sonication for 45 min. Methanol extracts were blown dry under a
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gentle N2 stream at ambient temperature. The dried extracts were reconstituted with 150 µL of a
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50:50 (v/v) solvent mixture of methanol and Milli-Q water (>18.2 MΩ). Five and 10 µL aliquots
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were injected onto the column (Waters ACQUITY UPLC HSS T3 column, 2.1 × 100 mm, 1.8
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µm particle size) and eluted at a 0.3 mL min-1 flow rate with a solvent mixture of methanol and
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water, each containing 0.1% acetic acid or 0.1% ammonium acetate (LC-MS Chromasolv-grade,
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Sigma-Aldrich) for negative (–) and positive (+) ion modes, respectively. Unretained compounds
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were detected by diode array at 0.94 min and ESI-HR-Q-TOFMS at 1.10 min. Due to the lack of
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standards for detected N-containing oligomer compounds, caffeine (> 99 %, Sigma-Aldrich) was
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used as a surrogate quantification standard for positive ion mode signals, resulting in order of
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magnitude uncertainties in estimated concentrations.
Chemical
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Computational estimates of absorbance. Electronic structure and ab initio molecular dynamics
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simulations (AIMD) were carried out with the TURBOMOLE quantum chemistry package.31
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Ground state equilibrium structures of the proposed compounds were optimized using density
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functional theory (DFT) with the approximate PBE32 and PBE033 exchange correlation
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functionals. AIMD simulations were carried out using the PBE functional and employ the
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resolution of identity approximation34 and the def2-SVP basis set.35
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energies and excited state properties were calculated using second-order approximate coupled
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cluster singles and doubles theory (CC2) and the closely related36 algebraic-diagrammatic
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construction through second order (ADC(2))37 in combination with the resolution of identity
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approximation38-40 and the def2-TZVP basis set.35 To take into account solvent effects we
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applied ADC(2) with the conductor-like screening model (COSMO).41 All calculations have
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been carried out with a dielectricity constant of 80.1 and a refractive index of 1.3325. The
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ADC(2)/COSMO approach has been successfully applied to incorporate solvent effects on
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electronic excitations.42, 43
Electronic excitation
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Conformational changes of the molecules were taken into account by generating a Boltzmann
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ensemble of each molecule using AIMD. For cyclic compounds, Born-Oppenheimer molecular
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dynamics (BOMD) was efficient enough to sample the conformational space. For non-cyclic,
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flexible molecules, we used replica-exchange molecular dynamics (REMD)44-46 to obtain an
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ensemble accounting for the different conformers. In BOMD and REMD a time step of 50 a.u
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and a Nosé-Hoover thermostat47, 48 with a characteristic response time of 500 a.u. was used. CC2
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and ADC(2) absorption spectra of the proposed molecules were calculated for the equilibrium
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ground state structures and by averaging spectra of >250 snapshot structures obtained from
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BOMD or REMD, as previously described.44,
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excitation energies were broadened using a Gaussian line shape with full widths at half
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maximum (FWHM) between 0.1 and 0.5 eV.49
49-51
For comparison with experimental spectra,
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Since experimental spectra were measured at slightly acidic conditions, all structures were
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generated as protonated, singly positively charged species. For compounds with several amino or
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imino groups, we carried out geometry optimization and total energy calculations prior to MD
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simulations in order to obtain the most likely protonation state. The lowest ten excited singlet
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states were calculated for each spectrum.
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Results
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A summary of experiments involving gas-phase methylglyoxal where product species were
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detected in filter extracts is shown in Table 1. Each experiment had at least two reduced nitrogen
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species present:
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methylamine. The particle-phase species detected in each experiment are listed in Table 2, with
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possible precursor molecule combinations for each product formula listed in Table S1.
one ionized in the seed aerosol (AS, MAS, or glycine), and gas-phase
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Table 1: Summary of Methylglyoxal Gas Addition Chamber Experiments Expt #
[MeGly]a (ppm)
Cloud [MeAm] Seed Aerosol processing (ppm) time Type (min)
Total illum. time (h)
Aerosol mass on filter (ug)b
Products detected on filter
A
0.80
1.0
AS
15
2.5
14
3
B
3.6a
~0.3c,d
MAS
16
1.9
50
15
C
6.9a
~0.6d
Glycine 18
1.7
70
6
Notes: a: Peak methylglyoxal (MeGly) concentrations as detected by PTR-TOF-MS. In experiments B and C, [MeGly] was 1.0 ppm prior to gas phase addition due to equilibration from the walls of the humidified chamber. b: based on SMPS size distribution and assumed density = 1 g/cm3. c: peak methylamine (MeAm) concentration detected by PTR-TOF-MS, volatilized from methylammonium sulfate (MAS) seeds or d: equilibrated from walls of humidified chamber.
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Table 2: Water-Soluble Aerosol-Phase Products Quantified in Each Methylglyoxal Gas
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Addition Experiment by UPLC/(+)ESI-HR-QTOFMS Quantity (ng m-3)a Detected Mass
Formula
Ionizing Species
Retention time tr (min) 1.6 1.1c 1.1c 1.1c 1.2 5.6 1.1c/2.2 2.5 1.1c 2.3 1.1c/2.6 6.0 1.1c/1.8 5.3 5.5 1.1c/2.8 5.9 7.0
∆ (ppm)b
Expt A (AS)
Expt B Expt C (MAS) (Gly)
159 160 161 162
102.0921 C5H11NO H+ 0.19 0.0 650 0.0 111.0901 C6H10N2 H+ 3.04 0.0 380 32 + 116.1067 C6H13NO H 4.05 0.0 25 0.0 132.1019 C6H13NO2 H+ 1.16 0.0 40 0.0 133.0999 C5H12N2O2 H+ 1.17 0.0 17 0.0 + 138.0968 C8H11NO H 1.79 0.0 54 0.0 + 141.1022 C7H12N2O H 3.23