Issue 11, 2011

Conversion of gaseous nitrogen dioxide to nitrate and nitrite on aqueous surfactants

Abstract

The hydrolytic disproportionation of gaseous NO2 on water's surface (2 NO2 + H2OHONO + NO3 + H+) (R1) has long been deemed to play a key, albeit unquantifiable role in tropospheric chemistry. We recently found that (R1) is dramatically accelerated by anions in experiments performed on aqueous microjets monitored by online electrospray mass spectrometry. This finding let us rationalize unresolved discrepancies among previous laboratory results and suggested that under realistic environmental conditions (R1) should be affected by everpresent surfactants. Herein, we report that NO2(g) uptake is significantly enhanced by cationic surfactants, weakly inhibited by fulvic acid (FA, a natural polycarboxylic acid) and anionic surfactants, and unaffected by 1-octanol. Surfactants appear to modulate interfacial anion coverage via electrostatic interactions with charged headgroups. We show that (R1) should be the dominant mechanism for the heterogeneous conversion of NO2(g) to HONO under typical atmospheric conditions throughout the day. The photoinduced reduction of NO2 into HONO on airborne soot might play a limited role during daytime.

Graphical abstract: Conversion of gaseous nitrogen dioxide to nitrate and nitrite on aqueous surfactants

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
13 Aug 2010
Accepted
07 Jan 2011
First published
31 Jan 2011

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2011,13, 5144-5149

Conversion of gaseous nitrogen dioxide to nitrate and nitrite on aqueous surfactants

T. Kinugawa, S. Enami, A. Yabushita, M. Kawasaki, M. R. Hoffmann and A. J. Colussi, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2011, 13, 5144 DOI: 10.1039/C0CP01497D

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