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Evidence for Quinone Redox Chemistry Mediating Daytime and Nighttime NO-to-HONO Conversion on Soil Surfaces 2
Nicole K. Scharko, Erin T. Martin, Yaroslav B. Losovyj, Dennis G Peters, and Jonathan D. Raff Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b01363 • Publication Date (Web): 25 Jul 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on July 27, 2017
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Evidence for Quinone Redox Chemistry Mediating Daytime and Nighttime NO2-to-HONO Conversion on Soil Surfaces
5
Jonathan D. Raff a,b,*
Nicole K. Scharko,a Erin T. Martin,b Yaroslav Losovyj,b Dennis G. Peters,b and
6 7 8
a
School of Public and Environmental Affairs, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405-2204 b
Department of Chemistry, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405-7102
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ABSTRACT. Humic acid (HA) is thought to promote NO2 conversion to nitrous acid (HONO)
12
on soil surfaces during the day. However, it has proven difficult to identify the reactive sites in
13
natural HA substrates. The mechanism of NO2 reduction on soil surrogates comprised of HA
14
and clay minerals was studied by use of a coated-wall flow reactor coupled to cavity-enhanced
15
spectroscopy.
16
correlated to the abundance of C‒O moieties in HA determined from X-ray photoelectron spectra
17
of the C1s region. Twice as much HONO was formed when NO2 reacted with HA that was
18
photoreduced by irradiation with UV-visible light compared to the dark reaction; photochemical
19
reactivity was correlated to the abundance of C=O moieties rather than C‒O groups. Bulk
20
electrolysis was used to generate HA in a defined reduction state. Electrochemically reduced
21
HA enhanced NO2-to-HONO conversion by a factor of two relative to non-reduced HA. Our
22
findings suggest that hydroquinones and benzoquinones, which are interchangeable via redox
23
equilibria, contribute to both thermal and photochemical HONO formation. This conclusion is
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supported by experiments that studied NO2 reactivity on mineral surfaces coated with the model
25
quinone, juglone. Results provide further evidence that redox-active sites on soil surfaces drives
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ground-level NO2-to-nitrite conversion in the atmospheric boundary-layer throughout the day,
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while amphoteric mineral surfaces promote the release of nitrite formed as gaseous HONO.
Conversion of NO2 to HONO in the dark was found to be significant and
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TOC/Abstract Art
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INTRODUCTION
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Nitrous acid (HONO) is an important precursor to hydrogen oxide radicals (HOx ≡ OH + HO2)
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that contribute to ground-level ozone and aerosol production.1-4 Concentrations of HONO in the
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lower atmosphere fluctuate from highs of hundreds of parts per trillion (ppt) at night to minima
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of tens of ppt during the daytime.5-11 Although daytime concentrations seem low, the short
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photolysis lifetime of HONO (~10 min) requires a strong source flux.12 In addition, vertical
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gradients of HONO are observed, which provide strong evidence for ground surfaces as the
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dominant source of HONO to the atmospheric boundary-layer.8-10,13,14 Unfortunately, the exact
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mechanism(s) responsible for the formation of HONO remain obscure. Accumulation of HONO
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in the nocturnal boundary-layer had previously been attributed to hydrolysis of NO2 on ground
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surfaces according to reaction (1):15-17 surfaces 2NO 2 + H 2O → 2H + + NO 2− + NO 3−
(1)
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However, it is possible that this reaction is limited to situations involving high NO2
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concentrations18 or when NO2 is a photoproduct generated in a solvated environment.19
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Additional sources may also contribute to nocturnal emissions of HONO from soil, e.g.,
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ammonia-oxidizing bacteria and archaea,20,21 reactions of NO2 with phenolic compounds,22-25 or
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iron-bearing minerals in soil.26 With respect to daytime HONO sources, the following are a few
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of the mechanisms that have been proposed: (1) photolysis of nitrophenols;25,27 (2) displacement
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of NO2‾ by strong acids produced during photooxidation events;28 (3) surface photochemistry
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involving NO3‾;19,29-31 and (4) reduction of NO2 on irradiated soot or humic acid (HA).32-38
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Reduction of NO2 by irradiated soil organic matter is likely an important daytime source due to
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the widespread distribution of soil in the terrestrial environment.39 Ammann and coworkers were
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the first to demonstrate NO2-to-HONO conversion on HA surfaces irradiated with UV-visible
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light.32,33 They suggested that the reactive sites responsible for NO2 photoreduction might be
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phenolic in nature, although it was not possible from their data to identify the reducing
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intermediates in natural HA substrates.33 The mechanism was instead inferred from model
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systems that showed efficient uptake of NO2 by aqueous solutions of phenols.23,24 Furthermore,
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studies show that UV-visible irradiation of mixtures containing photosensitizers (e.g.,
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benzophenone or methylene blue) and polyphenols generate phenolic radicals40 that can reduce
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NO2.25,32 Such model systems are relevant to soil systems as soil organic matter is, in part,
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derived from polyphenolic lignin and tannin precursors.
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Redox properties of soil organic matter have been attributed to the presence of quinone
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moieties.41-45 Quinones are a class of aromatic compounds that readily transition between three
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oxidation states (benzoquinones, semiquinones, and hydroquinones) depending on redox
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conditions (Scheme 1).46,47 Fully oxidized benzoquinones are electron-acceptors that readily
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convert to semiquinone radicals, which are thought to give rise to the persistent electron
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paramagnetic signature observed in organic matter isolates.48-51 Semiquinone radicals may be
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oxidized to reform the benzoquinones, or semiquinones may undergo coupled proton–electron
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transfer to generate hydroquinones, which are the fully reduced endmember. Additionally, inter-
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conversion between benzoquinones and hydroquinones is possible via comproportionation
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reactions
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Furthermore, benzoquinones are photoactive; when excited with light and in the presence of
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hydrogen donors, they will generate semiquinone radicals.53 It is therefore reasonable to
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hypothesize that soil organic matter can reduce NO2 via the semiquinone or hydroquinone
(i.e.,
one-electron
transfers
between
benzoquinones
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hydroquinones).52
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species generated via dark or photochemistry (Scheme 1), potentially enabling it to facilitate
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NO2-to-HONO conversion at nighttime as well as during the day.
Scheme 1. Quinone Redox Chemistry and Potential Intermediates Responsible for NO2-to-HONO Conversion by Organic Matter. Color shadings indicate oxidation state.
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To our knowledge, a role of quinone redox chemistry in promoting both daytime and nighttime
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HONO formation on soil surfaces has not been explored in natural HA systems, although
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quinone redox chemistry is thought to have an important impact on nutrient cycling and the fate
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of pollutants in soil and aquatic systems.52,54 The objective of this work is to characterize both
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thermal and photochemical pathways that convert NO2 to HONO on soil organic matter. The
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approach was to expose coatings of humic acid isolates or a model quinone to NO2 in a flow tube
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and to monitor changes in NO2 and HONO in the dark and during irradiation with UV-visible
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light. Surrogate soil systems were constructed that reflect the important role that mineral–organic
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matter interactions play in controlling release of HONO from soil surfaces. The reactivity was
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compared to the physical-chemical properties of the humic acid isolates to identify the chemical
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moieties contributing to NO2-to-HONO conversion. Additionally, substrates containing
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electrochemically reduced humic acid isolates were generated to investigate the role of
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quinone/hydroquinone redox chemistry on the conversion process.
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EXPERIMENTAL SECTION
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Chemicals. Suwannee River Humic Acid Standard II (SRHA II, Cat # 2S101H), Elliott Soil
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Humic Acid Standard IV (ESHA, Cat # 4S102H), Pahokee Peat Humic Acid (PPHA, Cat #
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1S103H) and Leonardite Humic Acid Standard (LHA, Cat # 1S104H) were purchased from the
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International Humic Substance Society (IHSS). The terrestrial HAs include ESHA, PPHA, and
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LHA, whereas the single aquatic HA studied is SRHA. An industrial sourced HA from Sigma-
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Aldrich was used for comparison (called “Sigma” in this work). Kaolinite (Fluka, natural),
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aluminum sulfate hydrate (98%), sodium phosphate monobasic monohydrate (ACS reagent,
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≥98%), sodium phosphate dibasic heptahydrate (ACS reagent, 98−102%), diquat (Pestanal®,
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analytical standard), and juglone (97%) were obtained from Sigma-Aldrich. Sodium hydroxide
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(2 N, Baker analyzed® reagent) was from J. T. Baker, and isopropyl alcohol (UltimAR®) was
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from Macron chemicals.
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Coated-Wall Flow Tube Experiments. Experiments investigating uptake of NO2 on
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substrate-coated Pyrex tubes were carried out in a jacketed (23 ± 0.02 °C) Pyrex horizontal flow
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tube (2 cm i.d. × 100 cm) equipped with a movable injector.55 The interior walls of the flow tube
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were coated with a perfluorinated polymer to minimize wall effects, and Teflon tubing and
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fittings were used throughout the apparatus. The substrate is coated on the inner surface of a 1.7
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cm i.d. × 5.08 cm section of Pyrex tubing that is then inserted into the flow tube. The carrier gas
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was zero air at 295 K (or nitrogen gas for the electrochemical experiments), and the total flow of
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gas exiting the flow tube was 2100 cm3 min–1; 1000 cm3 min–1 of this flow was directed to the
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cavity-enhanced absorption spectrometer (CEAS) for simultaneous detection of NO2 and HONO.
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The CEAS system was described previously.19 The integration time was 20 s and the number of
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scans averaged was 30. All experiments were carried out at ambient temperature and pressure.
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The detection limit for NO2 and HONO is 0.7 ppb and 0.2 ppb, respectively. For all experiments,
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the relative humidity (RH) of the carrier gas was adjusted by flowing zero air through a glass frit
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submerged in ultrapure water, followed by dilution with zero air in a 3-L reservoir equipped with
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a RH gauge and temperature probe (Vaisala, HMT130).
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In a typical uptake experiment, a coated tube is inserted into the flow tube and a mixture of NO2
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in humid air (30% RH) is directed through the movable injector into the CEAS bypassing the
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substrate coating; this is done to quantitate the initial NO2 concentration. After 20 min, the
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injector was pulled back 36 cm behind the substrate to expose it to NO2; exposures were 130 min
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long for the HA and 30 min when juglone was the substrate. Due to the 10 min averaging times
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required by the CEAS, we are unable to determine the initial uptake coefficients for the reaction
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of NO2 with HA. The reported uptake coefficients (see SI for derivation) are derived from
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averages of data collected over the ~130 min long exposure times following the initial uptake
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event. Hence, they approximate a steady-state uptake coefficient that is more applicable to
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longer-term exposures of soil surfaces to atmospheric NO2. During photolysis experiments, the
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substrate was simultaneously exposed to the NO2 mixture and the filtered output (λ > 280 nm) of 7 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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a 200 W Hg arc lamp (Hamamatsu). The lamp was positioned adjacent to the flow tube such that
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the entire coated surface was irradiated.
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actinometry, see SI) reaching the center of the flow tube was 5.4 × 1016 and 2.8 × 1016 photons
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cm–2 s–1 in the absence and presence of the coated sample, respectively.
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Substrates and Coating Procedure. In the environment, soil organic matter occurs in
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close association with clay minerals. With this in mind, we prepared model soil substrates
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consisting of 96% kaolinite, 2% HA and 2% aluminum sulfate [Al2(SO4)3] (by weight). The
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following rationale was used for constructing this model soil system:
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phyllosilicate clay mineral commonly found in a wide range of soils; (b) the amount of HA (2%)
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and the pH level of 5 were chosen based on values found in locally collected soil samples
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(Crider-Urban land complex), which had a measured organic matter content of 2.5% and a pH of
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5.09;21 and (c) the added Al2(SO4)3 hydrolyzes to form an Al (hydr)oxide coating on the kaolinite
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surface.56 The resulting Al (hydr)oxide coating is amphoteric and carries a net positive surface
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charge at near neutral pH due to the presence of surface Al-OH2+ groups. The net positive
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charge facilitates electrostatic binding of negatively charged HA isolates to the surface; this
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produces a highly uniform coating of HA on kaolinite particles. In addition, the Al-OH2+ groups
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are capable of protonating NO2‾ at a bulk pH that is 3‒4 units above the pKa of HONO.57 Lastly,
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the Al (hydr)oxide coating is redox inactive, ensuring that results are not impacted by metal
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redox chemistry.
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In all cases, aqueous slurries consisting of the above-mentioned mixture were pH adjusted to 5
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with 2 N NaOH prior to coating the flow reactor. The pH was measured with a benchtop pH
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meter equipped with pH/ATC probe (Thermos Scientific Orion Star A211 and Ross Ultra
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pH/ATC triode) at a substrate to water ratio of 1:2 (w/w). Each coating was prepared by
The photon flux (determined by means of NO2
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(a) Kaolinite is a
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dripping a slurry of substrate in nanopure water (Millipore, 18.2 MΩ cm) onto the inner surface
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of a glass tube and spinning the tubing to ensure that the substrate coats the entire inner surface.
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Excess substrate was removed, and the coated tube was immediately placed in a drying chamber
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and allowed to dry overnight in air (or nitrogen gas). The resulting coating was uniform to the
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eye with a mass of 0.6 g and a thickness of 70 µm (Figure S2). The amount of substrate coating
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the flow reactor walls was chosen based on two sets of experiments (not shown) that aimed to
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investigate NO2-to-HONO conversion on substrates consisting of local soil or 2%
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juglone/kaolinite (w/w). In both cases, a mass loading of 0.6 g (22 mg cm‒2) was well within the
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region where additional soil mass had no influence on the uptake kinetics.
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experiments, the substrate-coated tubes were placed in a RH-stabilized air equilibration chamber
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for 30–45 min prior to being transferred to the flow tube. This is done to ensure that all
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substrates contain similar amounts of moisture prior to and during the experiments.
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Electrochemical Experiments.
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aqueous solutions with 0.10 M sodium phosphate (pH 7) as the supporting electrolyte. Oxygen
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was removed from the system by means of constant argon flow through the electrochemical cell,
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and the cell was darkened to avoid photolysis of humic material. In all cases, the reference
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electrode was a homemade saturated calomel electrode (SCE), and data were processed with the
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aid of OriginPro 2015 software. For cyclic voltammetry, an EG&G PAR 2273 instrument was
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used with PowerSuite software. Cells and procedures used have been described in previous
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publications.58,59
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Working electrodes were glassy carbon disks press-fitted into Teflon rods to yield an area of
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0.071 cm2, and the auxiliary electrode was a coiled platinum wire. Working electrodes were
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polished with 0.05-µm alumina (Buehler) and sonicated in solvent between scans. Controlled-
Prior to all
All electrochemical measurements were performed in
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potential (bulk) electrolyses were performed with the aid of a PARC model 173 potentiostat. A
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locally written LabView program was used for data collection. A two-compartment (divided)
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cell was used as previously described in the literature.58,60 The anode compartment consisted of
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a carbon rod auxiliary anode in water containing sodium phosphate buffer, and was separated
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from the cathode compartment by a sintered-glass disk backed by an agar–solvent–electrolyte
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plug. For bulk electrolyses performed in this cell, the cathode compartment contained 20 mL,
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and carbon working electrodes were reticulated vitreous carbon discs with an approximate area
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of 200 cm2 (RVC 2X1-100S, Energy Research and Generation, Inc.).
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Once the HA was reduced or processed (meaning that it went through the same process as the
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reduced HA without applied potential, termed here as “non-reduced”), the solution was dried
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with nitrogen and the recovered HA was mixed with kaolinite and Al2(SO4)3 and pH adjusted to
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5 as described above. The coating was prepared as described above. All subsequent drying, RH-
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stabilization, and experiments were carried out with nitrogen gas to prevent the oxidation of HA.
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The average time between retrieving the HA from the electrolysis cell to exposing the coating in
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the flow reactor was 4 days. Flow reactor experiments involving exposure of electrochemically
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reduced HA to NO2 were carried out in N2 to minimize the oxidation of reduced HA in air.
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X-ray
194
measurements were performed on a PHI VersaProbe II instrument equipped with a
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monochromatic Al Kα source. Humic acid samples were used as purchased and pressed onto
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double-sided tape, which was placed on a sample plate. Experiments were run at the base
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pressure of 4−8 × 10−10 Torr. All XPS spectra were obtained at room temperature without
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heating samples due to fear of decomposing the samples. Under these conditions, we believe
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that at least a couple of monolayers of water are still present on the sample surface. Thus, we
Photoelectron
Spectroscopy
(XPS).
X-ray photoelectron
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assume that substrate modifications due to dehydration reactions are negligible.
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experiments, the X-ray power of 65 W at 15 kV was used with beam size of 260 µm at take-off
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angles of 45°. Utilizing the Fermi edge of the valence band for metallic silver for XPS (Hell
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line), the instrument resolution was determined to be 0.3 and 0.15 eV, respectively. Minima of
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10−60 scans were collected for the spectra, using 0.05−0.1 eV step and 23 eV pass energy.
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Spectra were recorded using SmartSoft-XPS v2.0 (PHI) and processed using MultiPack v9.0
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(PHI). The instrument was calibrated to give a binding energy of 284.8 for the C1s line of
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adventitious (aliphatic) carbon presented on the non-sputtered samples.
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contain elemental composition from the survey scan and the percent carbon from the high-
209
resolution carbon region. The carbon region was deconvoluted using the binding energies,
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assignments and full width at half maximum (FWHM) from Monteil-Rivera et al;61 See Tables
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S1 and S2. A similar procedure was used by Gerin et al.62 and by Fimmen et al.63 to specifically
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provide evidence of quinone and phenol content in dissolved organic matter. All XPS spectra
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were obtained using pure humic acid isolates to achieve highest possible signal-to-noise ratio for
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subsequent peak deconvolution. No significant differences in the C1s region were observed
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between samples comprised of pure HA isolates and those where HA was coated onto kaolinite
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other than the presence of interfering K2p3/2 lines in the latter (Figure S3).
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RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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NO2-to-HONO conversion on Leonardite Humic Acid (LHA). To investigate the
219
conversion of NO2 to HONO on humic acid surfaces under dark conditions, NO2 was exposed to
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a kaolinite/Al (hydr)oxide substrate containing 2% LHA, and the amounts of NO2 and HONO
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present were monitored for 140 min. Figure 1A shows the amounts of NO2 and HONO before
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(between 0 and 10 min) and during (10−140 min) exposure to ~60 ppb of NO2 in air. After 11 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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exposure of the substrate for 130 min to NO2, the average amount by which the initial NO2
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concentration decreased following exposure to the surface (i.e., ∆NO2) was 6.4 ppb; the average
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increase in HONO concentration in the flow tube was 5.6 ppb. The resulting HONO/∆NO2 ratio
226
is 0.88, and is higher than expected if one considers only the surface hydrolysis reaction of NO2
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(Equation 1), which would result in a ratio of 0.5.17,64 That the ratio is slightly less than unity
228
can be due to the following: (i) reactions of NO2 that do not lead to HONO;25,65 (ii) small
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amounts of HONO that remain adsorbed to the substrate (e.g., as NO2¯); or (iii) secondary
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reactions of HONO before it is emitted.55,66 Over an extended period of time, the amount of NO2
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taken up by the surface and the amount of HONO generated decreased slightly. This implies that
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surface reactive sites are consumed during the course of the reaction. In the absence of LHA, no
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significant uptake of NO2 was observed on the Al (hydr)oxide-coated kaolinite substrate, and the
234
amount of HONO formed, if any, was below the limit of detection (0.2 ppb, which corresponds
235
to an uptake coefficient of 1 × 10–6); see Figure S4. This is consistent with the study by Liu et al.
236
who used a more sensitive chemiluminescence analyzer to measure uptake coefficients between
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5 × 10‒8 and 3 × 10‒8 for the adsorption of NO2 on kaolinite.67 This is three orders of magnitude
238
lower than the uptake coefficients we measured for the reaction of NO2 on humic acid coated
239
kaolinite substrates (Figure S4).
240
experiments was due to the LHA present in the substrate and not a direct reaction of NO2 with
241
the kaolinite. Further control experiments performed by replacing LHA with 2% citric acid
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showed no reactivity between NO2 and the substrate in the dark (Figure S6). This confirms that
243
carboxylate functional groups are not responsible for the reactivity of the humic acid sample.
244
The role of LHA in reducing NO2 is therefore consistent with the presence of reduced species
245
(e.g., semiquinones) capable of donating electrons.68
This shows that the reduction of NO2 to HONO in our
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We compared the reactivity of LHA coatings toward NO2 in the dark to those irradiated with
247
UV-visible light. Figure 1B shows that, upon exposure to light, the average uptake of NO2 was
248
13.4 ppb and the amount of HONO generated was 10.7 ppb. When compared to results from the
249
dark experiment (Figure 1A), light exposure enhanced the uptake of NO2 and HONO emitted by
250
a factor of ~2. When exposed to light, LHA is photo-reduced and as a result has a greater
251
capacity to reduce NO2 relative to what is observed in the dark. Whereas the reactivity gradually
252
decreases for the substrates in the dark, the amount of NO2 taken up by the surface and the
253
amount of HONO generated during photochemical experiments remained relatively constant
254
over the course of the experiment. In addition, both photochemical and thermal pathways have
255
similar HONO yields with HONO/∆NO2 ratios of 0.88. The comparison between thermal and
256
photochemical reactivity of NO2 with LHA (Figure 1A & B) suggests that light activates reactive
257
sites that are inactive in the dark, and can regenerate them photochemically after they are
258
consumed.
259
The amount of HONO formed from humic acid surfaces in the dark is surprising considering that
260
previous studies suggest this process to be negligible when compared to HONO produced
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photochemically in the same system.33,34,37,38 Comparison of our results to those of previous
262
studies is complicated by differences in experimental conditions used. These include: (i)
263
differences in lamp intensities and emission spectra; (ii) the phase that the humic acid was in
264
(e.g., dissolved, aerosolized, or present as a coating); and (iii) the composition and corresponding
265
point of zero charge of the substrate. Of these differences, point of zero charge of the substrate is
266
likely the most critical. Previous studies used two-component substrates comprised of humic
267
acid and water (present as the solvent or adsorbed to a surface), where speciation of N(III) and
268
partitioning between dissolved and gas phase was governed by aqueous equilibria alone. For 13 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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those systems, the bulk aqueous pH of the system needed to be below the pKa of nitrite (~3) for
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significant HONO outgassing to occur; HONO release was suppressed at higher pH values.34 In
271
our system, the additional contribution of surface acidity of the Al (hydr)oxide/kaolinite mineral
272
surface must be considered. As discussed above, conversion of adsorbed nitrite to HONO is
273
favored on amphoteric surfaces with high points of zero charge, where highly acidic M-OH2+ (M
274
= metal e.g., Al or Fe) groups may be abundant.
275
(hydr)oxide/kaolinite surfaces are capable of protonating nitrite at a bulk pH that is 3‒4 units
276
above the pKa of HONO.57 Thus, while the organic matter coatings are responsible for reducing
277
NO2 to NO2‾, it is the amphoteric mineral surface that facilitates protonation of NO2‾ and release
278
of gaseous HONO over a wide pH range.
279
Reactivity of Electrochemically Reduced Humic Acid.
280
photochemical reduction of NO2 to HONO by organic matter involves a semiquinone
281
intermediate that is formed following photo-excitation of a benzoquinone, as shown in Scheme
282
1. Previous studies have attributed the free-radical signature in electron paramagnetic resonance
283
studies of organic matter to the presence of stable semiquinone moeties. 48 If stable semiquinone
284
groups are generated when LHA is irradiated with UV-visible light, we should be able to form
285
them electrochemically. If formed, we expect NO2-to-HONO conversion on reduced HA to be
286
enhanced relative to the non-reduced HA—similar to the type of enhancement that was observed
287
for the photochemical vs. dark experiments shown in Figure 1A and B. LHA was chosen for this
288
particular study due to its high electron-accepting capacity and presumably high abundance of
289
reducible quinone groups.41
290
Samples of electrochemically reduced LHA were generated in bulk electrolysis cells via the
291
mediated electrochemical reduction technique.69,70 The reduced substrates were subsequently
Our previous study showed that Al
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We hypothesize that the
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isolated and used as a substrate for flow reactor studies. The advantage of electrochemically
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reducing HA at an electrode is that we avoid the use of strong chemical reductants70 that can by
294
themselves reduce NO2. The disadvantage of the system is that LHA is a bulky material that
295
limits the rate of electron transfer and makes observation of direct reduction by cyclic
296
voltammetry difficult. For this reason, diquat dibromide monohydrate (diquat) was used as a
297
mediator for electron transfer. Figure 1C shows cyclic voltammograms recorded for diquat alone
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and in the presence of 1 or 2 g L–1 LHA at a glassy carbon electrode. Low concentrations lead to
299
limited peak currents.
300
mediator, and the marked increase in cathodic current at –0.64 V vs. SCE upon addition of LHA.
301
For the purpose of preparing reduced LHA, controlled-potential electrolyses were performed at –
302
0.84 V vs. SCE with LHA concentrations of 2 g L-1 and 30 µM diquat. An average of 1.3 mmol
303
e– were transferred per gram of LHA, which agrees with previously reported values.46
304
Figure 1D displays the average uptake of NO2 and HONO emitted when ~60 ppb of NO2 was
305
exposed to flow reactor coatings comprised of either non-reduced or electrochemically reduced
306
LHA, potassium phosphate, and diquat at pH 5. In both the dark and when irradiated with UV-
307
visible light, the electrochemically reduced LHA was found to be most reactive, producing twice
308
as much HONO as the non-reduced substrate. Interestingly, regardless of the reduction method
309
employed (photochemical or electrochemical), the reduced LHA substrates have the capacity to
310
enhance the uptake of NO2 and HONO formation by a factor of 2 relative to their non-reduced
311
counterparts. This similarity in enhancement factors supports the idea that semiquinones and
312
phenols generated from (electrochemical or photochemical) reduction of benzoquinone moieties
313
are responsible for NO2-to-HONO conversion in the photochemical system.
However, notable is the reversible behavior visible for the diquat
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314
It is worth noting that the reactivity of the electrochemically modified substrates (Figure 1D)
315
appears to be lower than untreated substrates (Figure 1A & B). We suspect this is due to the
316
presence of diquat in the latter experiments. Diquat is a herbicide known to bond strongly to soil
317
particles.71 It is possible that diquat molecules form strong electrostatic interactions with the
318
carboxylate and phenolate groups within the HA,72 thus limiting the access of NO2 to HA
319
reactive sites. An alternative explanation is that diquat lowers reactivity by scavenging electrons
320
before they can be transferred to NO2.
321
Structure and Reactivity of HA in the Dark. It is well known that HAs from different
322
origins have different reducing capacities that depend on their structure and the functional groups
323
present.41,73 To understand better how HA structure impacts the conversion of NO2 to HONO, a
324
series of NO2 uptake experiments was carried out on various types of HA in the absence of light.
325
Figure 2A shows the direct relationship between the average amounts of HONO generated and
326
the corresponding amount of NO2 reacted on the substrates. The trend for the amount of HONO
327
formed and NO2 reacted is Sigma < LHA < ESHA < PPHA < SRHA. Linear regression of the
328
data in Figure 2A yields a slope that corresponds to a [HONO]/∆NO2 ratio of 0.84 ± 0.02 (R2 =
329
0.99).
330
The differences in reactivity among the various substrates are not entirely surprising as each HA
331
is expected to be comprised of different moieties that influence their structure and reducing
332
capacities.68 To understand why certain HAs form more HONO than others, the dark reactivity
333
was correlated to chemical properties of the various HAs. Figure 2B shows the average amount
334
of HONO (from Figure 2A) plotted versus the electron-donating capacity (EDC) for each HA (at
335
0.61 V, pH 7), as measured by Aeschbacher et al.41 These authors showed that the EDC for HA
336
derived from aquatic environments is greater than what it is for terrestrial HAs.41 Our data are 16 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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337
generally consistent with this observation. As shown in Figure 2B, the aquatic HA (SRHA) has
338
the highest reactivity and EDC, followed by the terresitrial HAs; the industrial-sourced HA
339
(Sigma) has the lowest reactivity and EDC. This is consistent with previous findings that
340
organic matter from natural waters and soil has a higher phenol content than does HA from
341
Sigma-Aldrich.41 It should be noted that the EDC is a measure of the total moles of electrons
342
donated by reduced HA to an electrode, whereas the dark reactivity we measure here reflects the
343
electrons transferred to NO2 and subsequently released as HONO(g). Thus, lack of a tight
344
correlation between reactivity and EDC may indicate that some of the electrons are transferred to
345
components in the coating other than NO2 (i.e., trace metals, other organic moieties, or
346
dioxygen). However, our attempts at correlating reactivity to trace metal content (i.e., trace
347
metal abundances provided by IHSS or determined by XPS) did not yield any significant
348
correlations.
349
We used X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) to analyze directly the C/O moieties of the
350
humic acid isolates,63 with the goal of relating surface composition to the observed reactivity.
351
High-resolution C1s spectra of all HA isolates were fit to quantitate the distribution of carbon
352
corresponding to known functional groups. Many studies have been devoted to interpreting and
353
quantitating the C1s spectra of materials in environmental and biological systems.61-63,74
354
Although it is possible that multiple functional groups can occur at the same binding energy, we
355
use the approach of Gerin et al. where the functional groups considered are as follows: (a) C‒C
356
and C‒H groups at 284.9 eV; (b) C‒O and C‒N groups at 286.4 eV; (c) C=O and O‒C‒O groups
357
at 287.5 eV; and (d) O=C‒O, O=C‒N, and CO32‒ at 288.7 eV (Tables S1 & S2).62 Of particular
358
interest are the peaks at 286.4 and 287.5 eV, which include contributions from
359
phenol/hydroquinone and benzoquinone functional groups, respectively. For all experiments, no
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360
statistically significant correlations were observed between the fitted areas determined for the
361
peak centered at 288.7 eV and elemental N or amino acid content (as reported by the
362
International Humic Substance Society)75 of the HA isolates studied here. In addition, we
363
excluded from our analysis peaks at 284.9 eV, which could be influenced by carbon
364
contamination from the room air. Thus, in the discussion below, we limit our analysis to the
365
peaks at 286.4 and 287.5 eV.
366
Peak areas derived from high-resolution C1s spectra were plotted along with the amount of
367
HONO formed during the reaction of NO2 with the substrate to infer relationships between
368
structure and reactivity (Figure 2C & D). The strongest linear correlation was found between the
369
[HONO]dark and the peak area corresponding to C‒O (Figure 2C). There was no significant
370
correlation between [HONO]dark and the C=O peak area (Figure 2D), suggesting that C=O
371
functionalities may not be participating in the observed reactivity. The statistically significant
372
positive correlation to C‒O content and the lack of any relationship to C=O content provides
373
evidence in favor of the hypothesis that the reducing ability of HA is driven by semiquinones or
374
hydroquinones, which are capable of donating electrons to NO2.
375
HA Structure and Photochemical Reactivity. Figure 3A shows the relationship between
376
the amounts of HONO generated photochemically ([HONO]total) and amounts of NO2 reacted
377
when NO2 is flowed over various humic acid substrates that are irradiated with UV-visible light
378
(λ < 280 nm). Although the amount of HONO produced is different for each humic acid, the
379
overall conversion efficiency is similar regardless of HA origin. A linear regression of the data
380
in Figure 2A yields a slope that corresponds to a [HONO]/∆NO2 of 0.88 ± 0.02 (R2 = 0.99)—
381
similar to what was observed for the reaction of NO2 with HA in the dark.
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382
Data shown in Figure 3A reflect the total reactivity of the substrate due to thermal and
383
photochemical processes. To display the amount of HONO formed and NO2 reacted due to
384
photochemistry alone, [HONO]photo, we subtracted the data in Figure 2A from those displayed in
385
Figure 3A (i.e., [HONO]photo = [HONO]total – [HONO]dark). The amount of NO2 taken up on the
386
surface due to the photochemistry alone was calculated in the same way and is referred to as
387
∆[NO2]photo. As shown in Figure 3B, there are differences in the photochemical reactivity of the
388
various humic acids when [HONO]photo is plotted vs. ∆[NO2]photo. In particular, the most reactive
389
substrates are the non-peat terrestrial humic acids EHSA and LHA, whereas SRHA and PPHA
390
display the lowest photochemical reactivity. To help explain these trends, we used UV-visible
391
absorption spectroscopy and the C1s XPS spectra to provide information regarding the
392
chromophores responsible for the photochemistry.
393
Figure 3C displays the aqueous-phase UV-visible absorbance spectra for the HA series, along
394
with the normalized light intensity of the excitation source used (filtered output from a Hg lamp).
395
For the most part, the amount of HONO formed tracks the amount of light absorbed by the HAs
396
between 300‒380 nm, which is the range encompassing the two most intense emission lines from
397
the Hg arc lamp. Overlap between each HA absorbance spectrum and the lamp emission
398
spectrum was calculated by summing the product of HA absorbance and normalized lamp
399
intensity over the entire spectrum (280‒500 nm). Results (Figure 3D) show a statistically
400
significant positive correlation between the amount of HONO produced photochemically and the
401
spectral overlap between the chromophore and lamp. Highest reactivity belongs to non-peat
402
terrestrial HA (LHA and ESHA) with the highest spectral overlap; the aquatic humic acid
403
SRHA, with its lower spectral overlap, was least active photochemically. We attribute this to a
404
higher abundance of benzoquinone moieties in non-peat terrestrial HA vs. the aquatic organic
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405
matter.76 LHA originates from lignite coal, whereas ESHA is derived from agricultural soil
406
composed of highly degraded material; both are highly oxidized and have high electron-
407
accepting capacity indicative of the presence of benzoquinones.41 Indeed, the higher absorbance
408
of LHA and ESHA in the tail extending into the low-energy region of the visible spectrum is
409
thought to be due in part to the presence of benzoquinone moieties.41 For example, the molecule
410
juglone, which can be thought of as a surrogate for quinones in natural organic matter, possesses
411
a strong absorbance band between 350‒500 nm (Figure 3C). Aquatic humic acid SRHA is not as
412
highly oxidized (i.e., aged) and has a higher phenol content and relatively lower abundance of
413
benzoquinone moieties. Although a role of non-aromatic ketones in this process cannot be
414
completely ruled out, we believe they do not play a role in this process since such molecules
415
require wavelengths between 230‒320 nm for excitation.
416
Further support for the importance of benzoquinone functional groups in promoting
417
photochemical NO2-to-HONO conversion comes from linear correlations between [HONO]photo
418
and the peak areas of the C‒O and C=O bands derived from the XPS spectra (Figure 3E & F). In
419
stark contrast to the NO2 dark reaction, the photochemical reactivity is not correlated to the
420
presence of C‒O groups which include phenolic moieties (Figure 3E). Instead, a statistically
421
significant correlation was found between [HONO]photo and C=O groups (Figure 3F). This is
422
further evidence that benzoquinones are the chromophores responsible for photochemical
423
reduction of NO2 to HONO on surfaces consisting of HA.
424
Taken together, the data are consistent with a mechanism by which reduced species such as
425
semiquinones and hydroquinones are generated when benzoquinone moieties present in HA are
426
excited by UV-visible light (Scheme 1). Following their reaction with NO2, the phenols are re-
427
oxidized to the benzoquinone state,65 which can be cycled back to a phenol upon absorption of a 20 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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428
photon, or in the presence of a chemical reductant. This mechanism accounts for differences in
429
reactivity seen in Figures 1A and 1B. The efficiency of the NO2 + HA reaction in the dark
430
decreases over time as semiquinone and hydroquinone reactive sites are oxidized to
431
benzoquinones (Figure 1A). In contrast, the photochemical reactivity observed in Figure 1B is
432
relatively constant over the course of the experiment (>2 h) since photochemistry provides a
433
mechanism to regenerate semiquinones and hydroquinone reactive sites.
434
Quinone/Hydroquinone Chemistry in a Model System. To confirm that benzoquinone
435
moieties in HA can facilitate NO2-to-HONO conversion, we repeated the experiments shown in
436
Figure 1A and B by replacing the 2% HA coating on the kaolinite/Al (hydro)oxide substrate with
437
one containing juglone (5-hydroxy-1,4-napthalenedione).
438
compound that contains neighboring phenol and para-quinone moieties.77 As discussed above
439
and shown in Figure 3C, juglone absorbs UV-visible light between 300 and 500 nm. Thus, we
440
expect juglone to react with NO2 via both the thermal and photochemical pathways shown in
441
Scheme 1.
442
Figure 4A shows changes in the HONO and NO2 concentrations following exposure of juglone-
443
coated substrate to 60 ppb of NO2 in the dark. Following exposure, the initial NO2 concentration
444
dropped by 6.1 ppb and the amount of HONO increased by ~3.7 ppb relative to background
445
levels.
446
kaolinite/Al(hydro)oxide alone (Figure S5), we attribute the observed HONO formation in the
447
dark to reaction of NO2 with the phenol group present in juglone.23,24
448
experiment, but this time flowed NO2 over a juglone-containing substrate that was irradiated
449
with UV-visible light (λ > 280 nm). As shown in Figure 4B, the average drop in [NO2] is 8.1 ppb
450
while the HONO concentration increased by 6.1 ppb. Exposure to UV-visible light enhances
Since we did
not
observed
significant
Juglone is a naturally occurring
NO2-to-HONO conversion
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We repeated this
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451
HONO formation by a factor of ~2, which is comparable to the enhancement factors observed
452
for the humic acids studied here. Quinones such as juglone will generate an excited triplet state
453
when they absorb a photon (Scheme 1).53 This reactive species is capable of reacting with
454
hydrogen donors (e.g., from solvent or a neighboring organic molecule) to generate
455
semiquinones and, upon further reduction, a hydroquinone.53 Thus, we propose that NO2 is
456
reduced to HONO by a semiquinone or hydroquinone species generated photochemically from
457
juglone.65
458
It is interesting that the reactivity of the juglone-coated kaolinite is comparable to most of the
459
humic acid substrates studied, even though humic acid substrates contain only a fraction of the
460
quinone/hydroquinone moieties compared to the juglone substrate. Although one would expect
461
reactivity to scale with surface concentration, we believe the higher density of electron rich
462
chromophores may actually enhance secondary losses of HONO (via electrophilic aromatic
463
substitution), which would decrease the yield of HONO and explain the lower NO2-to-HONO
464
conversion efficiencies of juglone compared to the humic acid substrate (Table S6-S8). It is also
465
possible that light screening effects, energy transfer, or reactions between excited state organic
466
species (e.g., irreversible phenoxide radical couplings)50 lowered the apparent reactivity of
467
juglone at these relatively high surface densities. Future work will explore the chemistry of these
468
model systems in more detail.
469
Environmental Implications.
470
semiquinones) are important reactive sites for NO2 reduction in the dark, while benzoquinone
471
moieties are key to the photochemical reactivity of NO2 on HA-containing surfaces. This is
472
consistent with the prevailing theory that the electron-donating and accepting capacities of humic
473
acid are due to phenols and benzoquinones, respectively, which are end members of the same
The present results suggest that hydroquinones (and
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474
reversible redox couple.42,43,45-47,73
475
studies utilizing model phenols22,24,25 that showed significant NO2-to-HONO conversion in the
476
dark, and studies showing negligible HONO formation when NO2 was exposed to surfaces
477
coated with natural HA isolates.33,34 Another novel insight provided by this work is that the
478
efficiency of NO2-to-HONO conversion on soil surfaces will depend on soil surface pH. Soil
479
organic matter exists in strong association with soil minerals78-80 whose surface acidity
480
(determined by the density of M-OH2+ groups) can have a major impact on the speciation of
481
adsorbed acids such as HONO. Thus, soil surfaces not only provide redox-active sites that
482
promote NO2 reduction (via reduced functional groups in organic matter), but also provide the
483
surface acidity required to volatilize nitrite as gaseous HONO.
484
The potential environmental significance of quinone-centered heterogeneous chemistry on both
485
the thermal (dark) and photochemical HONO sources is supported by a comparison of reaction
486
efficiency derived from our laboratory results and published field campaigns. We quantitate the
487
reaction efficiency of the heterogeneous reaction in terms of a (net) reactive uptake coefficient
488
(γNO2), which reflects the fraction of NO2 collisions with a surface that result in formation of a
489
HONO molecule. From our coated-wall flow reactor experiments, we find that γNO2 ranges from
490
6 × 10−6 to 4.6 × 10−5 for the thermal reaction (Figure S4A); when the HA surfaces are irradiated
491
with UV-visible light, γNO2 varies between 1.8 × 10−5 and 8 × 10−5 (Figure S4B). Our values of
492
γNO2 are higher than those derived in previous laboratory studies of HA reactivity,33,34 likely due
493
to our use of amphoteric mineral substrates capable of protonating nitrite. This suggests that
494
NO2-to-HONO conversion is more efficient on substrates containing humic acid that is
495
associated with minerals.
This mechanism helps to clarify discrepancies between
23 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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496
Values of γNO2 calculated from the coated-wall flow-reactor experiments reported here are
497
consistent with those derived from field measurements.14,81,82 For example, the range of
498
nocturnal γNO2 values calculated from measured HONO gradients in Colorado was 0.2‒1.6 ×
499
10−5; a value of 8 × 10−6 provided the best fit to the data.81 For daytime HONO production, a
500
modeling study by Wong et al. found that a γNO2 value of 6 × 10−5 was needed to account for the
501
daytime levels of HONO observed;14 this is in the range of uptake coefficients calculated here
502
(Figure S4B). Calculated γNO2 values derived from our HA-clay substrates appear consistent with
503
values required to explain nighttime and daytime HONO formation on real boundary-layer
504
surfaces.
505
The relative importance of the HA mechanism in promoting daytime NO2-to-HONO conversion
506
on boundary-layer surfaces is a matter of recent debate. A recent field campaign observed that
507
daytime HONO levels were relatively constant even when NO2 levels varied, which revealed that
508
daytime HONO does not depend on NO2(g).11 In contrast, nighttime HONO concentrations were
509
correlated to ambient NO2, supporting the idea that redox chemistry on ground surfaces may be
510
more important during the night than in the daytime. This makes sense since NO2 concentrations
511
are higher at night due to the absence of the major daytime sinks for NO2 (photolysis and
512
reaction with OH). Thus, the higher concentrations of NO2 at night may make up for the less
513
efficient NO2-to-HONO conversion rate in the dark relative to photochemical production rates.
514
The most important role for daytime photochemistry may be to regenerate semiquinone or
515
hydroquinone moieties within soil organic matter after they have been depleted during the
516
previous night. This is similar to the finding that actinic light can help regenerate reactive sites
517
on soot surfaces that were previously deactivated via dark reactions.36 Therefore, daytime
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518
photochemistry centered in soil organic matter may not only be capable of reducing NO2 during
519
the daytime, but also activating soil surfaces for nighttime HONO production.
520
ASSOCIATED CONTENT
521
Supporting Information.
522
The Supporting Information is available free of charge on the ACS Publications website at DOI:
523
10.1021/acs.est.#######. Details of UV-visible spectroscopy measurements; NO2 actinometry
524
measurements; XPS spectral analysis and results; tables containing results for thermal,
525
electrochemical, and photochemical experiments; description of the calculations used for the
526
determination of uptake coefficients and results; and results from control experiments.
527
AUTHOR INFORMATION
528
Corresponding Author
529
*E-mail:
[email protected]; Phone: +1 (812) 855-6525. Address: 702 N. Walnut Grove
530
Ave., Rm 308, Bloomington, IN 47405-2204.
531
Notes
532
The authors declare no competing financial interest.
533
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
534
We gratefully acknowledge support from a National Science Foundation CAREER Award
535
(AGS-1352375), the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science via their Biological and
536
Environmental Research (BER) program (DE‐SC0014443), and Indiana University. N.K.S. was
537
supported by a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Science to Achieve Results (STAR)
538
Graduate Fellowship program.
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FIGURES
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Figure 1. (A & B) Concentration of NO2 and HONO over time before and after NO2 (1 atm at 30% RH) is exposed to kaolinite/Al2(SO4)3 substrates containing 2% LHA at pH 5 under the following conditions: (A) in the dark and (B) when exposed to UV-visible light (λ > 280 nm). The error bars represent uncertainty of the least-squares fit of the reference spectrum to the experimental data. (C) Cyclic voltammograms recorded in solutions containing redox mediator diquat and leonardite humic acid (LHA) at pH 7 (0.1 M potassium phosphate) and at a scan rate of 0.10 V s−1. (D) Average ∆NO2 and the amount of HONO generated over the period of 130 min when 60 ppb of NO2 is exposed to non-reduced diquat-LHA and reduced diquat-LHA substrates in the dark and when irradiated with UV-visible light. Error bars represent 95% confidence interval, and the letters represent whether there is a significant difference using an ANOVA oneway at a level of 0.05.
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Figure 2. Average amount of HONO generated over a period of 130 min when 60 ppb of NO2 is exposed to various HA substrates [kaolinite/Al2(SO4)3] adjusted to pH 5, at 30% RH in the dark as a function of: (A) The average difference between initial [NO2] (first 10 min before reaction) and the [NO2] determined every 10 min for 130 min when the HA substrate is exposed to NO2, (B) electron-donating capacity (at 0.61 V, pH 7),41 XPS C1s spectral peak areas corresponding to abundance of (C) C−O and (D) C=O and O−C−O functionalities in HA. All error bars represent 95% confidence interval and red lines represent linear fits and gray areas represent 95% confidence bands.
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Figure 3. (A) Average amount of HONO generated and NO2 reacted when 60 ppb of NO2 (in 1 atm air at 30% RH) is exposed to various HA substrates [kaolinite/Al2(SO4)3] adjusted to pH 5 and irradiated with UV-visible light (λ > 280 nm). (B) Amount of HONO formed and NO2 taken up due to photochemistry alone for the HA-containing substrates indicated. (C) Aqueous phase UV-visible spectra of HA isolates (15 mg L−1 in 0.1 M potassium phosphate buffer, pH 7), juglone (15 mg L−1 in isopropyl alcohol) and the normalized light-intensity of the Hg arc lamp with 280 nm cutoff filter. Average of the difference between HONO generated in the light and dark as a function of: (D) The sum of UV absorbance for the HAs multiplied by the normalized light intensity, XPS C1s spectral peak areas corresponding to abundance of (E) C−O and (F) C=O functionalities in HA. All error bars represent 95% confidence interval and red lines represent linear fits and gray areas represent 95% confidence bands. 37 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Figure 4. Concentration of NO2 and HONO over time before and during exposure of NO2 to substrates consisting of 2% juglone in kaolinite/Al2(SO4)3 under the following conditions: (A) in the dark and (B) when irradiated with UV-visible light. Dashed lines represent when the substrates were exposed to NO2. Error bars represent uncertainty of the least-squares fit of the reference spectrum to the experimental data.
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