Directly measuring Fe(iii)-catalyzed SO2 oxidation rate in single optically levitated droplets†
Abstract
Sulfate aerosols are produced in China's winter haze at an unresolved rapid rate. Such fast kinetics may arise from a heterogeneous SO2 conversion in urban aerosols, which differs significantly from the aqueous S(IV) oxidation in bulk solutions. Given the uniqueness of aerosols as a multiphase reactor, it is preferable to measure the heterogeneous SO2 conversion rate in situ, ideally in levitated microdroplets. Here, we directly measure the Fe(III)-catalyzed SO2 conversion in single microdroplets trapped and levitated with a gradient-force aerosol optical tweezer. The sulfate formation rate was inferred from the droplet's growth rate driven by the heterogeneous reaction. Our results show that the Fe(III)-catalyzed SO2 conversion in aerosols is 2 to 3 decades faster than that determined in bulk solutions. The SO2 reactive uptake coefficient at pH ∼5.0 and 298 K is on the order of 10−4 to 10−3. The reaction rate scales with droplet surface area, indicating that the major reaction location is the air–water interface. This interfacial reaction is further corroborated by a positive kinetic salt effect, a trait of the interaction between ions and the neutral molecules, such as Fe(III) ions and SO2 molecules. The reaction rate decreases by up to a decade, as the Fe(III)/S(VI) coexisting time increases, possibly owing to a complexation between Fe(III) and S(VI) ions.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Particle Levitation to Address Challenges in Atmospheric Science