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Showing papers in "Journal of Physical Chemistry A in 2016"
Journal Article•10.1021/ACS.JPCA.6B07236•
Novel TiO2/C3N4 Photocatalysts for Photocatalytic Reduction of CO2 and for Photocatalytic Decomposition of N2O

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Martin Reli, Pengwei Huo, Marcel Šihor, Nela Ambrožová, Ivana Troppová, Lenka Matějová, Jaroslav Lang, Ladislav Svoboda, Piotr Kuśtrowski1, Michal Ritz, Petr Praus, Kamila Kočí •
Jagiellonian University1
19 Oct 2016-Journal of Physical Chemistry A
TL;DR: The highest activity is achieved by combination of a number of factors: (i) specific surface area, (ii) adsorption edge energy, (iii) crystallite size, and (iv) efficient separation of the charge carriers, where the efficient separation is the most decisive parameter.
Abstract: TiO2/g-C3N4 photocatalysts with the ratio of TiO2 to g-C3N4 ranging from 0.3/1 to 2/1 were prepared by simple mechanical mixing of pure g-C3N4 and commercial TiO2 Evonik P25. All the nanocomposites were characterized by X-ray powder diffraction, UV–vis diffuse reflectance spectroscopy, photoluminescence, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, Raman spectroscopy, infrared spectroscopy, transmission electron microscopy, photoelectrochemical measurements, and nitrogen physisorption. The prepared mixtures along with pure TiO2 and g-C3N4 were tested for the photocatalytic reduction of carbon dioxide and photocatalytic decomposition of nitrous oxide. The pure g-C3N4 exhibited the lowest photocatalytic activity in both cases, pointing to a very high recombination rate of charge carriers. On the other hand, the most active photocatalyst toward all the products was (0.3/1)TiO2/g-C3N4. The highest activity is achieved by combination of a number of factors: (i) specific surface area, (ii) adsorption edge energy, (iii) cr...

190 citations

Journal Article•10.1021/ACS.JPCA.5B09107•
Pyrene Scaffold as Real-Time Fluorescent Turn-on Chemosensor for Selective Detection of Trace-Level Al(III) and Its Aggregation-Induced Emission Enhancement.

[...]

Milan Shyamal1, Prativa Mazumdar1, Samir Maity1, Gobinda Prasad Sahoo1, Guillermo Salgado-Morán2, Ajay Misra1 •
Vidyasagar University1, Andrés Bello National University2
06 Jan 2016-Journal of Physical Chemistry A
TL;DR: A pyrene based fluorescent probe, 3-methoxy-2-((pyren-2yl-imino)methyl)phenol (HL), was synthesized via simple one-pot reaction from inexpensive reagents and displayed high sensitivity and selectivity toward Al(3+) over other relevant metal ions and also displayed novel aggregation-induced emission enhancement (AIEE) characteristics in its aggregate/solid state.
Abstract: A pyrene based fluorescent probe, 3-methoxy-2-((pyren-2yl-imino)methyl)phenol (HL), was synthesized via simple one-pot reaction from inexpensive reagents. It exhibited high sensitivity and selectivity toward Al3+ over other relevant metal ions and also displayed novel aggregation-induced emission enhancement (AIEE) characteristics in its aggregate/solid state. When bound with Al3+ in 1:1 mode, a significant fluorescence enhancement with a turn-on ratio of over ∼200-fold was triggered via chelation-enhanced fluorescence through sensor complex (Al-L) formation, and amusingly excess addition of Al3+, dramatic enhancement of fluorescence intensity over manifold through aggregate formation was observed. The 1:1 stoichiometry of the sensor complex (Al-L) was calculated from Job’s plot based on UV–vis absorption titration. In addition, the binding site of sensor complex (Al-L) was well-established from the 1H NMR titrations and also supported by the fluorescence reversibility by adding Al3+ and EDTA sequentially...

180 citations

Journal Article•10.1021/ACS.JPCA.6B05040•
Density Functional Theory Calculation of pKa's of Thiols in Aqueous Solution Using Explicit Water Molecules and the Polarizable Continuum Model.

[...]

Bishnu Thapa1, H. Bernhard Schlegel1•
Wayne State University1
29 Jun 2016-Journal of Physical Chemistry A
TL;DR: This study shows that the ωB97XD functional with the 6-31+G(d,p) and 6-311++G( d, p) basis sets, and the SMD solvation model with three explicit water molecules hydrogen bonded to the sulfur produces the best result for the test set.
Abstract: The pKa’s of substituted thiols are important for understanding their properties and reactivities in applications in chemistry, biochemistry, and material chemistry. For a collection of 175 different density functionals and the SMD implicit solvation model, the average errors in the calculated pKa’s of methanethiol and ethanethiol are almost 10 pKa units higher than for imidazole. A test set of 45 substituted thiols with pKa’s ranging from 4 to 12 has been used to assess the performance of 8 functionals with 3 different basis sets. As expected, the basis set needs to include polarization functions on the hydrogens and diffuse functions on the heavy atoms. Solvent cavity scaling was ineffective in correcting the errors in the calculated pKa’s. Inclusion of an explicit water molecule that is hydrogen bonded with the H of the thiol group (in neutral) or S– (in thiolates) lowers error by an average of 3.5 pKa units. With one explicit water and the SMD solvation model, pKa’s calculated with the M06-2X, PBEPBE,...

168 citations

Journal Article•10.1021/JP509534K•
Modeling the Radical Chemistry in an Oxidation Flow Reactor: Radical Formation and Recycling, Sensitivities, and the OH Exposure Estimation Equation

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R. Li1, Brett B. Palm2, Amber M. Ortega2, James Hlywiak3, Weiwei Hu2, Zhe Peng2, Douglas A. Day2, Christoph Knote4, William H. Brune3, Joost A. de Gouw1, Jose L. Jimenez2 •
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration1, University of Colorado Boulder2, Pennsylvania State University3, National Center for Atmospheric Research4
20 Apr 2016-Journal of Physical Chemistry A
TL;DR: A model has been developed to simulate the formation, recycling, and destruction of radicals and to allow the quantification of OH exposure (OHexp) in the reactor and its sensitivities, establishing the usefulness of such reactors for research studies, especially where quantifying the oxidation exposure is important.
Abstract: Oxidation flow reactors (OFRs) containing low-pressure mercury (Hg) lamps that emit UV light at both 185 and 254 nm (“OFR185”) to generate OH radicals and O3 are used in many areas of atmospheric science and in pollution control devices. The widely used potential aerosol mass (PAM) OFR was designed for studies on the formation and oxidation of secondary organic aerosols (SOA), allowing for a wide range of oxidant exposures and short experiment duration with reduced wall loss effects. Although fundamental photochemical and kinetic data applicable to these reactors are available, the radical chemistry and its sensitivities have not been modeled in detail before; thus, experimental verification of our understanding of this chemistry has been very limited. To better understand the chemistry in the OFR185, a model has been developed to simulate the formation, recycling, and destruction of radicals and to allow the quantification of OH exposure (OHexp) in the reactor and its sensitivities. The model outputs of ...

166 citations

Journal Article•10.1021/ACS.JPCA.6B02253•
Acidity of Strong Acids in Water and Dimethyl Sulfoxide

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Aleksander Trummal1, Lauri Lipping2, Ivari Kaljurand2, Ilmar A. Koppel2, Ivo Leito2 •
National Institute of Chemical Physics and Biophysics1, University of Tartu2
06 May 2016-Journal of Physical Chemistry A
TL;DR: Careful analysis and comparison of the available acidity data of HCl, HBr, HI, HClO4, and CF3SO3H in water, dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), and gas-phase has been carried out.
Abstract: Careful analysis and comparison of the available acidity data of HCl, HBr, HI, HClO4, and CF3SO3H in water, dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), and gas-phase has been carried out. The data include experimental and computational pKa and gas-phase acidity data from the literature, as well as high-level computations using different approaches (including the W1 theory) carried out in this work. As a result of the analysis, for every acid in every medium, a recommended acidity value is presented. In some cases, the currently accepted pKa values were revised by more than 10 orders of magnitude.

165 citations

Journal Article•10.1021/ACS.JPCA.5B06532•
Kinetics and Products of the Reaction of the First-Generation Isoprene Hydroxy Hydroperoxide (ISOPOOH) with OH

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Jason M. St. Clair, Jean C. Rivera-Rios1, John D. Crounse, Hasse C. Knap2, Kelvin H. Bates, Alex P. Teng, Solvejg Jørgensen2, Henrik G. Kjaergaard2, Frank N. Keutsch1, Frank N. Keutsch3, Paul O. Wennberg •
University of Wisconsin-Madison1, University of Copenhagen2, Harvard University3
10 Mar 2016-Journal of Physical Chemistry A
TL;DR: It is suggested that the major products, highly oxygenated organic peroxides, are lost to the chamber walls and an IEPOX global production rate of more than 100 Tg C each year is estimated from this chemistry using a global 3D chemical transport model, similar to earlier estimates.
Abstract: The atmospheric oxidation of isoprene by the OH radical leads to the formation of several isomers of an unsaturated hydroxy hydroperoxide, ISOPOOH. Oxidation of ISOPOOH by OH produces epoxydiols, IEPOX, which have been shown to contribute mass to secondary organic aerosol (SOA). We present kinetic rate constant measurements for OH + ISOPOOH using synthetic standards of the two major isomers: (1,2)- and (4,3)-ISOPOOH. At 297 K, the total OH rate constant is 7.5 ± 1.2 × 10–11 cm3 molecule–1 s–1 for (1,2)-ISOPOOH and 1.18 ± 0.19 × 10–10 cm3 molecule–1 s–1 for (4,3)-ISOPOOH. Abstraction of the hydroperoxy hydrogen accounts for approximately 12% and 4% of the reactivity for (1,2)-ISOPOOH and (4,3)-ISOPOOH, respectively. The sum of all H-abstractions account for approximately 15% and 7% of the reactivity for (1,2)-ISOPOOH and (4,3)-ISOPOOH, respectively. The major product observed from both ISOPOOH isomers was IEPOX (cis-β and trans-β isomers), with a ∼ 2:1 preference for trans-β IEPOX and similar total yields ...

154 citations

Journal Article•10.1021/ACS.JPCA.5B11567•
Where Do Photogenerated Holes Go in Anatase:Rutile TiO2? A Transient Absorption Spectroscopy Study of Charge Transfer and Lifetime.

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Andreas Kafizas1, Xiuli Wang1, Xiuli Wang2, Stephanie R. Pendlebury1, Piers R. F. Barnes1, Min Ling3, Carlos Sotelo-Vazquez3, Raul Quesada-Cabrera3, Can Li2, Ivan P. Parkin3, James R. Durrant1 •
Imperial College London1, Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics2, University College London3
27 Jan 2016-Journal of Physical Chemistry A
TL;DR: The importance of trap-state energetics for determining the direction of photogenerated charge separation across heterojunctions in films as a function of phase composition is demonstrated and how transient absorption spectroscopy is a useful tool for understanding this behavior is demonstrated.
Abstract: Anatase:rutile TiO2 junctions are often shown to be more photocatalytically active than anatase or rutile alone, but the underlying cause of this improvement is not fully understood. Herein, we employ transient absorption spectroscopy to study hole transfer across the anatase:rutile heterojunction in films as a function of phase composition. By exploiting the different signatures in the photoinduced absorption of trapped charges in anatase and rutile, we were able to separately track the yield and lifetime of holes in anatase and rutile sites within phase composites. Photogenerated holes transfer from rutile to anatase on submicrosecond time scales. This hole transfer can significantly increase the anatase hole yield, with a 20:80 anatase:rutile composite showing a 5-fold increase in anatase holes observed from the microsecond. Hole transfer does not result in an increase in charge-carrier lifetime, where an intermediate recombination dynamic between that of pure anatase (t1/2 ≈ 0.5 ms) and rutile (t1/2 ≈...

149 citations

Journal Article•10.1021/ACS.JPCA.6B06015•
Combinatorial Vibration-Mode Assignment for the FTIR Spectrum of Crystalline Melamine: A Strategic Approach toward Theoretical IR Vibrational Calculations of Triazine-Based Compounds

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Xiaohong Yuan1, Kun Luo1, Keqin Zhang1, Julong He1, Yuanchun Zhao1, Dongli Yu1 •
Yanshan University1
14 Sep 2016-Journal of Physical Chemistry A
TL;DR: The theoretical approach reported in this study opens the way to the facile and accurate assignment for IR vibrational modes of other complex triazine-based compounds, such as g-C3N4.
Abstract: Although polymeric graphitic carbon nitride (g-C3N4) has been widely studied as metal-free photocatalyst, the description of its structure still remains a great challenge. Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy can provide complementary structural information. In this paper, we reconsider the representative crystalline melamine and develop a strategic approach to theoretically calculate the IR vibrations of this triazine-based nitrogen-rich system. IR calculations were based on three different models: a single molecule, a 4-molecule unit cell, and a 32-molecule cluster, respectively. By this comparative study the contribution of the intermolecular weak interactions were elucidated in detail. An accurate and visualized description on the experimental FTIR spectrum has been further presented by a combinatorial vibration-mode assignment based on the calculated potential energy distribution of the 32-molecule cluster. The theoretical approach reported in this study opens the way to the facile and accu...

127 citations

Journal Article•10.1021/ACS.JPCA.5B12699•
Direct Measurement of pH in Individual Particles via Raman Microspectroscopy and Variation in Acidity with Relative Humidity

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Joel D. Rindelaub1, Rebecca L. Craig2, Lucy Nandy3, Amy L. Bondy2, Cari S. Dutcher3, Paul B. Shepson1, Andrew P. Ault2 •
Purdue University1, University of Michigan2, University of Minnesota3
03 Feb 2016-Journal of Physical Chemistry A
TL;DR: Raman microspectroscopy was used to determine the pH of individual particles based on sulfate and bisulfate concentrations determined from νs(SO4(2-)) and νS(HSO4(-)), the acid dissociation constant, and activity coefficients from extended Debye-Hückel calculations, indicating the potential for direct spectroscopic determination of pH in individual particles.
Abstract: Atmospheric aerosol acidity is an important characteristic of aqueous particles, which has been linked to the formation of secondary organic aerosol by catalyzing reactions of oxidized organic compounds that have partitioned to the particle phase. However, aerosol acidity is difficult to measure and traditionally estimated using indirect methods or assumptions based on composition. Ongoing disagreements between experiments and thermodynamic models of particle acidity necessitate improved fundamental understanding of pH and ion behavior in high ionic strength atmospheric particles. Herein, Raman microspectroscopy was used to determine the pH of individual particles (H2SO4+MgSO4) based on sulfate and bisulfate concentrations determined from νs(SO42–) and νs(HSO4–), the acid dissociation constant, and activity coefficients from extended Debye–Huckel calculations. Shifts in pH and peak positions of νs(SO42–) and νs(HSO4–) were observed as a function of relative humidity. These results indicate the potential f...

118 citations

Journal Article•10.1021/ACS.JPCA.6B06634•
Quantification of the Keto-Hydroperoxide (HOOCH2OCHO) and Other Elusive Intermediates during Low-Temperature Oxidation of Dimethyl Ether

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Kai Moshammer1, Ahren W. Jasper1, Denisia M. Popolan-Vaida2, Zhandong Wang3, Vijai Shankar Bhavani Shankar3, Lena Ruwe4, Craig A. Taatjes1, Philippe Dagaut5, Nils Hansen1 •
Sandia National Laboratories1, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory2, King Abdullah University of Science and Technology3, Bielefeld University4, Centre national de la recherche scientifique5
04 Oct 2016-Journal of Physical Chemistry A
TL;DR: The quantification of this keto-hydroperoxide together with the temperature-dependent concentration profiles of other intermediates including H2O2, HCOOH, CH3OCHO, and CH3OOH reveals new opportunities for the development of a next-generation DME combustion chemistry mechanism.
Abstract: This work provides new temperature-dependent mole fractions of elusive intermediates relevant to the low-temperature oxidation of dimethyl ether (DME). It extends the previous study of Moshammer et al. [J. Phys. Chem. A 2015, 119, 7361–7374] in which a combination of a jet-stirred reactor and molecular beam mass spectrometry with single-photon ionization via tunable synchrotron-generated vacuum-ultraviolet radiation was used to identify (but not quantify) several highly oxygenated species. Here, temperature-dependent concentration profiles of 17 components were determined in the range of 450–1000 K and compared to up-to-date kinetic modeling results. Special emphasis is paid toward the validation and application of a theoretical method for predicting photoionization cross sections that are hard to obtain experimentally but essential to turn mass spectral data into mole fraction profiles. The presented approach enabled the quantification of the hydroperoxymethyl formate (HOOCH2OCH2O), which is a key interm...

117 citations

Journal Article•10.1021/ACS.JPCA.6B09370•
Cost-Effective Implementation of Multiconformer Transition State Theory for Peroxy Radical Hydrogen Shift Reactions.

[...]

Kristian H. Møller1, Rasmus V. Otkjær1, Noora Hyttinen2, Theo Kurtén2, Henrik G. Kjaergaard1 •
University of Copenhagen1, University of Helsinki2
19 Dec 2016-Journal of Physical Chemistry A
TL;DR: Based on a small test system, (R)-CH(OH)(OO·)CH2CHO, a cost-effective approach to the practical implementation of multiconformer transition state theory for peroxy radical hydrogen shift reactions at atmospherically relevant temperatures is developed.
Abstract: Based on a small test system, (R)-CH(OH)(OO·)CH2CHO, we have developed a cost-effective approach to the practical implementation of multiconformer transition state theory for peroxy radical hydrogen shift reactions at atmospherically relevant temperatures. While conformer searching is crucial for accurate reaction rates, an energy cutoff can be used to significantly reduce the computational cost with little loss of accuracy. For the reaction barrier, high-level calculations are needed, but the highest level of electronic structure theory is not necessary for the relative energy between conformers. Improving the approach to both transition state theory and electronic structure theory decreases the calculated reaction rate significantly, so low-level calculations can be used to rule out slow reactions. Further computational time can be saved by approximating the tunneling coefficients for each transition state by only that of the lowest-energy transition state. Finally, we test and validate our approach usi...
Journal Article•10.1021/ACS.JPCA.6B09719•
Efficient Photocatalytic Degradation of Norfloxacin in Aqueous Media by Hydrothermally Synthesized Immobilized TiO2/Ti Films with Exposed {001} Facets.

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Murtaza Sayed1, Murtaza Sayed2, Murtaza Sayed3, Luqman Ali Shah3, Javed Ali Khan3, Noor S. Shah3, Noor S. Shah1, Jan Nisar3, Hasan M. Khan3, Pengyi Zhang2, Abdur Rahman Khan1 •
COMSATS Institute of Information Technology1, Tsinghua University2, University of Peshawar3
13 Dec 2016-Journal of Physical Chemistry A
TL;DR: The mechanistic studies revealed that •OH is mainly involved in the photocatalytic degradation of norfloxacin by {001} faceted TiO2/Ti film.
Abstract: In this study, a novel immobilized TiO2/Ti film with exposed {001} facets was prepared via a facile one-pot hydrothermal route for the degradation of norfloxacin from aqueous media. The effects of various hydrothermal conditions (i.e., solution pH, hydrothermal time (HT) and HF concentration) on the growth of {001} faceted TiO2/Ti film were investigated. The maximum photocatalytic performance of {001} faceted TiO2/Ti film was observed when prepared at pH 2.62, HT of 3 h and at HF concentration of 0.02 M. The as-prepared {001} faceted TiO2/Ti films were fully characterized by field-emission scanning electron microscope (FE-SEM), X-ray diffraction (XRD), high resolution transmission electron microscope (HR-TEM), and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). More importantly, the as-prepared {001} faceted TiO2/Ti film exhibited excellent photocatalytic performance toward degradation of norfloxacin in various water matrices (Milli-Q water, tap water, river water and synthetic wastewater). The individual influen...
Journal Article•10.1021/ACS.JPCA.6B07835•
Measurements and Predictions of Binary Component Aerosol Particle Viscosity

[...]

Young Chul Song1, Allen E. Haddrell, Bryan R. Bzdek, Jonathan P. Reid, Thomas J. Bannan2, David Topping2, Carl J. Percival, Chen Cai3 •
University of Bristol1, University of Manchester2, Beijing Institute of Technology3
07 Oct 2016-Journal of Physical Chemistry A
TL;DR: Measurements of the variation in aerosol particle viscosities with RH are reported, consistent with the conclusion that the viscosity of α-pinene SOA is most likely in the range 105 to 108 Pa s, and predictions of pure component viscosITY from group contribution approaches combined with either nonideal or ideal mixing reproduce the RH-dependent trends particularly well.
Abstract: Organic aerosol particles are known to often absorb/desorb water continuously with change in gas phase relative humidity (RH) without crystallization. Indeed, the prevalence of metastable ultraviscous liquid or amorphous phases in aerosol is well-established with solutes often far exceeding bulk phase solubility limits. Particles are expected to become increasingly viscous with drying, a consequence of the plasticizing effect of water. We report here measurements of the variation in aerosol particle viscosity with RH (equal to condensed phase water activity) for a range of organic solutes including alcohols (diols to hexols), saccharides (mono-, di-, and tri-), and carboxylic acids (di-, tri-, and mixtures). Particle viscosities are measured over a wide range (10–3 to 1010 Pa s) using aerosol optical tweezers, inferring the viscosity from the time scale for a composite particle to relax to a perfect sphere following the coalescence of two particles. Aerosol measurements compare well with bulk phase studie...
Journal Article•10.1021/ACS.JPCA.6B06146•
Simple and Green Fabrication of a Superhydrophobic Surface by One-Step Immersion for Continuous Oil/Water Separation

[...]

Jingfang Zhu1, Jingfang Zhu2, Bin Liu1, Longyang Li2, Zhixiang Zeng2, Wenjie Zhao2, Gang Wang, Xiaoyan Guan2 •
North University of China1, Chinese Academy of Sciences2
05 Jul 2016-Journal of Physical Chemistry A
TL;DR: Using stainless steel meshes with superhydrophobic and superoleophilic surfaces fabricated by rapid and simple one-step immersion in a solution containing hydrochloric acid and stearic acid, a miniature separation device pump was designed to collect pure oil from the oil/water mixture.
Abstract: In this paper, stainless steel meshes with superhydrophobic and superoleophilic surfaces were fabricated by rapid and simple one-step immersion in a solution containing hydrochloric acid and stearic acid. The apparent contact angles were tested by a video contact angle measurement system (CA). Field emission scanning electron microscopy (FE-SEM), Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) were conducted to characterize the surface topographies and chemical compositions. The SEM results showed that mesh surfaces were covered by ferric stearate (Fe[CH3(CH2)16COO]2) with low surface energy. The CA test results showed that the mesh had a maximum apparent contact angle of 160 ± 1.0° and a sliding angle of less than 5.0° for the water droplet, whereas the apparent contact angle for the oil droplet was zero. Ultrasound oscillation and exposure tests at atmospheric conditions and immersion tests in 3.5 wt % NaCl aqueous solution were conducted to confirm the mesh wi...
Journal Article•10.1021/ACS.JPCA.5B09762•
Coupled Cluster Evaluation of the Stability of Atmospheric Acid-Base Clusters with up to 10 Molecules.

[...]

Nanna Myllys1, Jonas Elm1, Roope Halonen1, Theo Kurtén1, Hanna Vehkamäki1 •
University of Helsinki1
26 Jan 2016-Journal of Physical Chemistry A
TL;DR: The DLPNO method is applied to large acid - base clusters consisting of up to 10 molecules, which have previously been out of reach with accurate coupled cluster methods, to better mimic the canonical coupled cluster calculations.
Abstract: We investigate the utilization of the domain local pair natural orbital coupled cluster (DLPNO-CCSD(T)) method for calculating binding energies of atmospherical molecular clusters. Applied to small complexes of atmospherical relevance we find that the DLPNO method significantly reduces the scatter in the binding energy, which is commonly present in DFT calculations. For medium sized clusters consisting of sulfuric acid and bases the DLPNO method yields a systematic underestimation of the binding energy compared to canonical coupled cluster results. The errors in the DFT binding energies appear to be more random, while the systematic nature of the DLPNO results allows the establishment of a scaling factor, to better mimic the canonical coupled cluster calculations. Based on the trends identified for the small and medium sized systems, we further extend the application of the DLPNO method to large acid - base clusters consisting of up to 10 molecules, which have previously been out of reach with accurate co...
Journal Article•10.1021/ACS.JPCA.6B03192•
Strong Hydrogen Bonded Molecular Interactions between Atmospheric Diamines and Sulfuric Acid

[...]

Jonas Elm, Coty N. Jen1, Theo Kurtén, Hanna Vehkamäki•
University of California, Berkeley1
04 May 2016-Journal of Physical Chemistry A
TL;DR: It is found that a single diamine is capable of efficiently stabilizing sulfuric acid clusters with up to four acid molecules, whereas monoamines such as dimethylamine are capable of stabilizing at most 2-3 sulfuric Acid molecules.
Abstract: We investigate the molecular interaction between methyl-substituted N,N,N′,N′-ethylenediamines, propane-1,3-diamine, butane-1,4-diamine, and sulfuric acid using computational methods. Molecular structure of the diamines and their dimer clusters with sulfuric acid is studied using three density functional theory methods (PW91, M06-2X, and ωB97X-D) with the 6-31++G(d,p) basis set. A high level explicitly correlated CCSD(T)-F12a/VDZ-F12 method is used to obtain accurate binding energies. The reaction Gibbs free energies are evaluated and compared with values for reactions involving ammonia and atmospherically relevant monoamines (methylamine, dimethylamine, and trimethylamine). We find that the complex formation between sulfuric acid and the studied diamines provides similar or more favorable reaction free energies than dimethylamine. Diamines that contain one or more secondary amino groups are found to stabilize sulfuric acid complexes more efficiently. Elongating the carbon backbone from ethylenediamine to...
Journal Article•10.1021/ACS.JPCA.5B11908•
Atomic Insight into the Lithium Storage and Diffusion Mechanism of SiO2/Al2O3 Electrodes of Lithium Ion Batteries: ReaxFF Reactive Force Field Modeling

[...]

Alireza Ostadhossein1, Sung Yup Kim2, Ekin D. Cubuk3, Yue Qi2, Adri C. T. van Duin1 •
Pennsylvania State University1, Michigan State University2, Harvard University3
25 Mar 2016-Journal of Physical Chemistry A
TL;DR: Simulation results indicates the capability of the developed force field to examine the energetics and kinetics of lithiation as well as Li transportation within the crystalline/amorphous silica and alumina phases and provide a fundamental understanding on the lithiation reactions involved in the Si electrodes covered by silica/alumina coating layers.
Abstract: Atomically deposited layers of SiO2 and Al2O3 have been recognized as promising coating materials to buffer the volumetric expansion and capacity retention upon the chemo-mechanical cycling of the nanostructured silicon- (Si-) based electrodes. Furthermore, silica (SiO2) is known as a promising candidate for the anode of next-generation lithium ion batteries (LIBs) due to its superior specific charge capacity and low discharge potential similar to Si anodes. In order to describe Li-transport in mixed silica/alumina/silicon systems we developed a ReaxFF potential for Li–Si–O–Al interactions. Using this potential, a series of hybrid grand canonical Monte Carlo (GCMC) and molecular dynamic (MD) simulations were carried out to probe the lithiation behavior of silica structures. The Li transport through both crystalline and amorphous silica was evaluated using the newly optimized force field. The anisotropic diffusivity of Li in crystalline silica cases is demonstrated. The ReaxFF diffusion study also verifies...
Journal Article•10.1021/ACS.JPCA.6B01655•
A New Allotrope of Nitrogen as High-Energy Density Material

[...]

Michael J. Greschner1, Michael J. Greschner2, Meng Zhang3, Arnab Majumdar2, Hanyu Liu4, Feng Peng, John S. Tse2, Yansun Yao2, Yansun Yao1 •
Canadian Light Source1, University of Saskatchewan2, East China University of Science and Technology3, Carnegie Institution for Science4
27 Apr 2016-Journal of Physical Chemistry A
TL;DR: The N6 molecule is a charge-transfer complex with an open-chain structure containing both single and triple bonds that leads to a much higher cohesive energy for the predicted crystal compared to solid N2.
Abstract: A new allotrope of nitrogen in which the atoms are connected to form a novel N6 molecule is predicted to exist at ambient conditions. The N6 molecule is a charge-transfer complex with an open-chain structure containing both single and triple bonds. The charge transfer induces ionic characteristics in the intermolecular interactions and leads to a much higher cohesive energy for the predicted crystal compared to solid N2. The N6 solid is also more stable than a previously reported polymeric solid of nitrogen. Because of the kinetic stability of the molecules and strong intermolecular interactions, the N6 crystal is shown by metadynamics simulations to be dynamically stable around room temperature and to only dissociate to N2 molecules above 700 K. The N6 crystal can likely be synthesized under high-pressure high-temperature conditions, and the considerable metastability may allow for an ambient-pressure recovery of the crystal. Because of the large energy difference between the single and triple bonds, the...
Journal Article•10.1021/ACS.JPCA.6B09483•
Photophysical Properties and Electronic Structure of Porphyrins Bearing Zero to Four meso-Phenyl Substituents: New Insights into Seemingly Well Understood Tetrapyrroles.

[...]

Amit Kumar Mandal1, Masahiko Taniguchi2, James R. Diers3, Dariusz M. Niedzwiedzki1, Christine Kirmaier1, Jonathan S. Lindsey2, David F. Bocian3, Dewey Holten1 •
Washington University in St. Louis1, North Carolina State University2, University of California, Riverside3
06 Dec 2016-Journal of Physical Chemistry A
TL;DR: Six free base porphyrins bearing 0-4 meso substituents have been examined by steady-state and time-resolved absorption and fluorescence spectroscopy in both toluene and N,N-dimethylformamide to affords fundamental insights into the photophysical properties and electronic structure of meso-phenylporphyrins that should aid their continued widespread use as benchmarks for tetrapyrrole-based architectures in chemical, solar-energy, and life-
Abstract: Six free base porphyrins bearing 0–4 meso substituents have been examined by steady-state and time-resolved absorption and fluorescence spectroscopy in both toluene and N,N-dimethylformamide (DMF). The lifetime of the lowest singlet excited state (S1) decreases with an increase in the number of meso-phenyl groups; the values in toluene are H2P-0 (15.5 ns) > H2P-1 (14.9 ns) > H2P-2c (14.4 ns) > H2P-2t (13.8 ns) ∼ H2P-3 (13.8 ns) > H2P-4 (12.8 ns), where “H2P” refers to the core free base porphyrin, the numerical suffix indicates the number of meso-phenyl groups, and “c” and “t” refer to cis and trans, respectively. The opposite trend is found for the fluorescence quantum yield; the values in toluene are H2P-0 (0.049) < H2P-1 (0.063) ∼ H2P-2c (0.063) < H2P-2t (0.071) < H2P-3 (0.073) < H2P-4 (0.090). Similar trends occur in DMF. All radiative and nonradiative (internal conversion and intersystem crossing) rate constants for S1 decay increase with the increasing number of meso-phenyl groups. The increase in t...
Journal Article•10.1021/ACS.JPCA.6B04194•
Accurate Measurements of Aerosol Hygroscopic Growth Over a Wide Range in Relative Humidity

[...]

Grazia Rovelli1, Rachael E. H. Miles, Jonathan P. Reid, Simon L. Clegg2•
University of Milano-Bicocca1, University of East Anglia2
17 Jun 2016-Journal of Physical Chemistry A
TL;DR: A new and accurate method for determining the equilibrium hygroscopic growth of aerosol droplets using a comparative evaporation kinetics approach is described, benchmarked for binary and ternary inorganic solution aerosols.
Abstract: Using a comparative evaporation kinetics approach, we describe a new and accurate method for determining the equilibrium hygroscopic growth of aerosol droplets. The time-evolving size of an aqueous droplet, as it evaporates to a steady size and composition that is in equilibrium with the gas phase relative humidity, is used to determine the time-dependent mass flux of water, yielding information on the vapor pressure of water above the droplet surface at every instant in time. Accurate characterization of the gas phase relative humidity is provided from a control measurement of the evaporation profile of a droplet of know equilibrium properties, either a pure water droplet or a sodium chloride droplet. In combination, and by comparison with simulations that account for both the heat and mass transport governing the droplet evaporation kinetics, these measurements allow accurate retrieval of the equilibrium properties of the solution droplet (i.e., the variations with water activity in the mass fraction of solute, diameter growth factor, osmotic coefficient or number of water molecules per solute molecule). Hygroscopicity measurements can be made over a wide range in water activity (from >0.99 to, in principle, 0.9 and ∼±1% below 80% RH, and maximum uncertainties in diameter growth factor of ±0.7%. For all of the inorganic systems examined, the time-dependent data are consistent with large values of the mass accommodation (or evaporation) coefficient (>0.1).
Journal Article•10.1021/ACS.JPCA.6B06770•
Development of a ReaxFF Reactive Force Field for the Pt-Ni Alloy Catalyst.

[...]

Yun Kyung Shin1, Lili Gai1, Sumathy Raman2, Adri C. T. van Duin1•
Pennsylvania State University1, ExxonMobil2
03 Oct 2016-Journal of Physical Chemistry A
TL;DR: The ReaxFF force field can be successfully used for the preparation of Pt-Ni nanobimetallic catalysts structure using GCMC and run MD simulations to investigate its role and the catalytic chemistry in catalytic oxidation, dehydrogenation and coupling reactions.
Abstract: We developed the ReaxFF force field for Pt/Ni/C/H/O interactions, specifically targeted for heterogeneous catalysis application of the Pt–Ni alloy. The force field is trained using the DFT data for equations of state of Pt3Ni, PtNi3 and PtNi alloys, the surface energy of the PtxNi1–x(111) (x = 0.67–0.83), and binding energies of various atomic and molecular species (O, H, C, CH, CH2, CH3, CO, OH, and H2O) on these surfaces. The ReaxFF force field shows a Pt surface segregation at x ≥ 0.67 for the (111) surface and x ≥ 0.62 for the (100) surface in vacuum. In addition, from the investigation of the preferential alloy component of the adsorbates, it is expected that H and CH3 on the alloy surface to induce a segregation of Pt whereas the oxidation intermediates and products such as C, O, OH, H2O, CO, CH, and CH2 are found to induce Ni segregation. The relative order of binding strengths among adsorbates is a function of alloy composition and the force field is trained to describe the trend observed in DFT c...
Journal Article•10.1021/ACS.JPCA.5B11366•
Computational Study on the Effect of Hydration on New Particle Formation in the Sulfuric Acid/Ammonia and Sulfuric Acid/Dimethylamine Systems.

[...]

Henning Henschel1, Theo Kurtén1, Hanna Vehkamäki1•
University of Helsinki1
09 Mar 2016-Journal of Physical Chemistry A
TL;DR: Electronic structure calculations on the hydrates of clusters of three molecules of sulfuric acid andThree molecules of ammonia or dimethylamine together with previously published material are presented to simulate the influence of hydration on the dynamic processes involved in particle formation.
Abstract: The formation of new particles through condensation from the gas phase is an important source of atmospheric aerosols. The properties of the electrically neutral clusters formed in the very first steps of the condensation process are, however, not directly observable by experimental means. We present here electronic structure calculations on the hydrates of clusters of three molecules of sulfuric acid and three molecules of ammonia or dimethylamine. On the basis of the results of these new calculations together with previously published material we simulate the influence of hydration on the dynamic processes involved in particle formation. Most strongly affected by hydration and most important as a mediator for the effect on particle formation rates are the evaporation rates of clusters. The results give an estimate of the sensitivity of the atmospheric particle formation rate for humidity. The particle formation rate can change approximately two orders of magnitude in either direction due to hydration; t...
Journal Article•10.1021/ACS.JPCA.5B12124•
Unimolecular Decomposition Rate of the Criegee Intermediate (CH3)2COO Measured Directly with UV Absorption Spectroscopy

[...]

Mica C. Smith1, Mica C. Smith2, Wen Chao3, Wen Chao2, Kaito Takahashi2, Kristie A. Boering1, Jim J. Lin3, Jim J. Lin2 •
University of California, Berkeley1, Academia Sinica2, National Taiwan University3
23 Mar 2016-Journal of Physical Chemistry A
TL;DR: The fast rates of unimolecular decomposition for (CH3)2COO, measured here, suggest that thermal decomposition may compete with the reactions with water and with SO2 for atmospheric removal of the dimethyl-substituted Criegee intermediate.
Abstract: The unimolecular decomposition of (CH3)2COO and (CD3)2COO was measured by direct detection of the Criegee intermediate at temperatures from 283 to 323 K using time-resolved UV absorption spectroscopy. The unimolecular rate coefficient kd for (CH3)2COO shows a strong temperature dependence, increasing from 269 ± 82 s–1 at 283 K to 916 ± 56 s–1 at 323 K with an Arrhenius activation energy of ∼6 kcal mol–1. The bimolecular rate coefficient for the reaction of (CH3)2COO with SO2, kSO2, was also determined in the temperature range 283 to 303 K. Our temperature-dependent values for kd and kSO2 are consistent with previously reported relative rate coefficients kd/kSO2 of (CH3)2COO formed from ozonolysis of tetramethyl ethylene. Quantum chemical calculations of kd for (CH3)2COO are consistent with the experiment, and the combination of experiment and theory for (CD3)2COO indicates that tunneling plays a significant role in (CH3)2COO unimolecular decomposition. The fast rates of unimolecular decomposition for (CH3...
Journal Article•10.1021/ACS.JPCA.6B10939•
Proximity-Induced H-Aggregation of Cyanine Dyes on DNA-Duplexes

[...]

Francesca Nicoli1, Matthias K. Roos1, Elisa A. Hemmig2, Marco Di Antonio2, Regina de Vivie-Riedle1, Tim Liedl1 •
Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich1, University of Cambridge2
09 Dec 2016-Journal of Physical Chemistry A
TL;DR: This work creates artificial H-aggregates of exactly two Cyanine 3 (Cy3) dyes by covalently linking them to a DNA molecule with controlled subnanometer distances by simulating vibrational resolved spectra based on molecular orbital theory.
Abstract: A wide variety of organic dyes form, under certain conditions, clusters know as J- and H-aggregates. Cyanine dyes are such a class of molecules where the spatial proximity of several dyes leads to overlapping electron orbitals and thus to the creation of a new energy landscape compared to that of the individual units. In this work, we create artificial H-aggregates of exactly two Cyanine 3 (Cy3) dyes by covalently linking them to a DNA molecule with controlled subnanometer distances. The absorption spectra of these coupled systems exhibit a blue-shifted peak, whose intensity varies depending on the distance between the dyes and the rigidity of the DNA template. Simulated vibrational resolved spectra, based on molecular orbital theory, excellently reproduce the experimentally observed features. Circular dichroism spectroscopy additionally reveals distinct signals, which indicates a chiral arrangement of the dye molecules. Molecular dynamic simulations of a Cy3–Cy3 construct including a 14-base pair DNA seq...
Journal Article•10.1021/ACS.JPCA.6B03271•
The Effect of Donor Group Rigidification on the Electronic and Optical Properties of Arylamine-Based Metal-Free Dyes for Dye-Sensitized Solar Cells: A Computational Study.

[...]

Liezel L. Estrella1, Mannix P. Balanay2, Dong Hee Kim1•
Kunsan National University1, Nazarbayev University2
14 Jul 2016-Journal of Physical Chemistry A
TL;DR: The theoretical design of various triphenylamine analogues is reported, wherein the central nitrogen moiety establishes an sp(2)-hybridization, which endows a significant participation in the charge-transfer properties of these dyes.
Abstract: One of the most significant aspects in the development of dye-sensitized solar cells is the exploration and design of high-efficiency and low-cost dyes. This paper reports the theoretical design of various triphenylamine analogues, wherein the central nitrogen moiety establishes an sp2-hybridization, which endows a significant participation in the charge-transfer properties. Density functional theory (DFT) and time-dependent DFT methodologies were utilized to investigate the geometry, electronic structure, photochemical properties, and electrochemical properties of these dyes. Different exchange–correlation functionals were initially evaluated to establish a proper methodology for calculating the excited-state energy of the reference dye, known as DIA3. Consequently, TD-LC-ωPBE with a damping parameter of 0.175 Bohr–1 best correlates with the experimental value. Four new dyes, namely, Dhk1, Dhk2, Dhk3, and Dhk4, were designed by modifying the rigidity of the donor moiety. According to the results, alterin...
Journal Article•10.1021/ACS.JPCA.6B09765•
Substrate Sulfoxidation by an Iron(IV)-Oxo Complex: Benchmarking Computationally Calculated Barrier Heights to Experiment

[...]

Fabián G. Cantú Reinhard1, Abayomi S. Faponle1, Sam P. de Visser1•
University of Manchester1
30 Nov 2016-Journal of Physical Chemistry A
TL;DR: This work presents a detailed computational study into para-substituted thioanisole sulfoxidation by a nonheme iron(IV)-oxo complex and finds that the enthalpy of activation is reproduced well, but all methods overestimate the entropy of activation by about 50%, for which a correction factor is recommended.
Abstract: High-valent metal-oxo oxidants are common reactive species in synthetic catalysts as well as heme and nonheme iron enzymes. In general, they efficiently react with substrates through oxygen atom transfer, and for a number of cases, experimental rate constants have been determined. However, because these rate constants are generally measured in a polar solution, it has been found difficult to find computational methodologies to reproduce experimental trends and reactivities. In this work, we present a detailed computational study into para-substituted thioanisole sulfoxidation by a nonheme iron(IV)-oxo complex. A range of density functional theory methods and basis sets has been tested for their suitability to describe the reaction mechanism and compared with experimentally obtained free energies of activation. It is found that the enthalpy of activation is reproduced well, but all methods overestimate the entropy of activation by about 50%, for which we recommend a correction factor. The effect of solvent...
Journal Article•10.1021/ACS.JPCA.5B12483•
Fast, Accurate Simulation of Polaron Dynamics and Multidimensional Spectroscopy by Multiple Davydov Trial States.

[...]

Nengji Zhou1, Nengji Zhou2, Lipeng Chen2, Zhongkai Huang2, Kewei Sun3, Yoshitaka Tanimura4, Yang Zhao2 •
Hangzhou Normal University1, Nanyang Technological University2, Hangzhou Dianzi University3, Kyoto University4
26 Feb 2016-Journal of Physical Chemistry A
TL;DR: For the first time, 2D spectra have been calculated for systems with off-diagonal exciton-phonon coupling by employing themultiple D2 ansatz to compute the nonlinear response function, testifying to the great potential of the multiple D1 (D2) ansatz for fast, accurate implementation of multidimensional spectroscopy.
Abstract: By employing the Dirac–Frenkel time-dependent variational principle, we study the dynamical properties of the Holstein molecular crystal model with diagonal and off-diagonal exciton–phonon coupling. A linear combination of the Davydov D1 (D2) ansatz, referred to as the “multi-D1 ansatz” (“multi-D2 ansatz”), is used as the trial state with enhanced accuracy but without sacrificing efficiency. The time evolution of the exciton probability is found to be in perfect agreement with that of the hierarchy equations of motion, demonstrating the promise the multiple Davydov trial states hold as an efficient, robust description of dynamics of complex quantum systems. In addition to the linear absorption spectra computed for both diagonal and off-diagonal cases, for the first time, 2D spectra have been calculated for systems with off-diagonal exciton–phonon coupling by employing the multiple D2 ansatz to compute the nonlinear response function, testifying to the great potential of the multiple D2 ansatz for fast, ac...
Journal Article•10.1021/ACS.JPCA.6B07322•
Deciphering the Structural Evolution and Electronic Properties of Magnesium Clusters: An Aromatic Homonuclear Metal Mg17 Cluster

[...]

Xinxin Xia1, Xiao-Yu Kuang1, Cheng Lu, Yuanyuan Jin1, Xiaodong Xing1, Gabriel Merino, Andreas Hermann2 •
Sichuan University1, University of Edinburgh2
20 Sep 2016-Journal of Physical Chemistry A
TL;DR: A detailed chemical bonding analysis distinctly indicates that the Mg17 cluster is the first neutral locally π-aromatic homonuclear all-metal cluster, which perfectly satisfies Hückel's well-known 4N + 2 rule.
Abstract: The structures and electronic properties of low-energy neutral and anionic Mgn (n = 3–20) clusters have been studied by utilizing a widely adopted CALYPSO structure searching method coupled with density functional theory calculations. A large number of low-energy isomers are optimized at the B3PW91 functional with the 6-311+G(d) basis set. The optimized geometries clearly indicate that a structural transition from hollow three-dimensional configurations to filled-cage-like structures occurs at n = 16 for both neutral and anionic clusters. Based on the anionic ground state structures, photoelectron spectra are simulated using time-dependent density functional theory (TD-DFT) and compared with experimental results. The good agreement validates that the current ground state structures, obtained from the symmetry-unconstrained searches, are true global minima. A detailed chemical bonding analysis distinctly indicates that the Mg17 cluster is the first neutral locally π-aromatic homonuclear all-metal cluster, ...
Journal Article•10.1021/ACS.JPCA.6B04138•
Structural, Optical, and Electronic Properties of Wide Bandgap Perovskites: Experimental and Theoretical Investigations

[...]

Naresh K. Kumawat1, Madhvendra Nath Tripathi2, Umesh V. Waghmare3, Dinesh Kabra1•
Indian Institute of Technology Bombay1, Guru Ghasidas University2, Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research3
27 May 2016-Journal of Physical Chemistry A
TL;DR: Electronic structure calculations reveal that electronic properties are mainly governed by Pb 6p and halide p orbitals, and estimates of EX within a hydrogen model suggest that an increase in EX by increasing the Cl(-) (chlorine) concentration is mainly due to a decrease in the dielectric constant with x.
Abstract: Wide bandgap hybrid halide perovskites based on bromine and chlorine halide anions have emerged as potential candidates for various optoelectronic devices. However, these materials are relatively less explored than the iodine-based perovskites for microscopic details. We present experiment and first-principles calculations to understand the structural, optical, and electronic structure of wide bandgap CH3NH3Pb(Br1-xClx)3 (x = 0, 0.33, 0.66, and 1) 3D hybrid perovskite materials. We substituted Br(-) with Cl(-) to tune the bandgap from 2.4 eV (green emissive) to 3.2 eV (blue (UV) emissive) of these materials. We correlate our experimental results with first-principles theory and provide an insight into important parameters like lattice constants, electronic structure, excitonic binding energy (EX), dielectric constant, and reduced effective mass (μr) of charge carriers in these perovskite semiconductors. Electronic structure calculations reveal that electronic properties are mainly governed by Pb 6p and halide p orbitals. Our estimates of EX within a hydrogen model suggest that an increase in EX by increasing the Cl(-) (chlorine) concentration is mainly due to a decrease in the dielectric constant with x and almost constant value of μr close to the range of 0.07me.
Journal Article•10.1021/ACS.JPCA.5B06237•
Kinetics, Mechanism, and Secondary Organic Aerosol Yield of Aqueous Phase Photo-oxidation of α-Pinene Oxidation Products.

[...]

D. Aljawhary1, R. Zhao1, Alex K. Y. Lee1, Chen Wang1, Jonathan P. D. Abbatt1 •
University of Toronto1
10 Mar 2016-Journal of Physical Chemistry A
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that aqueous formation of SOA materials also occurs from monoterpene oxidation products, thus representing an additional source of biogenically driven aerosol formation.
Abstract: Formation of secondary organic aerosol (SOA) involves atmospheric oxidation of volatile organic compounds (VOCs), the majority of which are emitted from biogenic sources Oxidation can occur not only in the gas-phase but also in atmospheric aqueous phases such as cloudwater and aerosol liquid water This study explores for the first time the aqueous-phase OH oxidation chemistry of oxidation products of α-pinene, a major biogenic VOC species emitted to the atmosphere The kinetics, reaction mechanisms, and formation of SOA compounds in the aqueous phase of two model compounds, cis-pinonic acid (PIN) and tricarballylic acid (TCA), were investigated in the laboratory; TCA was used as a surrogate for 3-methyl-1,2,3-butanetricarboxylic acid (MBTCA), a known α-pinene oxidation product Aerosol time-of-flight chemical ionization mass spectrometry (Aerosol-ToF-CIMS) was used to follow the kinetics and reaction mechanisms at the molecular level Room-temperature second-order rate constants of PIN and TCA were determined to be 33 (± 05) × 10(9) and 31 (± 02) × 10(8) M(-1) s(-1), respectively, from which were estimated their condensed-phase atmospheric lifetimes Aerosol-ToF-CIMS detected a large number of products leading to detailed reaction mechanisms for PIN and MBTCA By monitoring the particle size distribution after drying, the amount of SOA material remaining in the particle phase was determined An aqueous SOA yield of 40 to 60% was determined for PIN OH oxidation Although recent laboratory studies have focused primarily on aqueous-phase processing of isoprene-related compounds, we demonstrate that aqueous formation of SOA materials also occurs from monoterpene oxidation products, thus representing an additional source of biogenically driven aerosol formation
...

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