Research & Teaching Faculty

Viscosity and liquid-liquid phase separation in healthy and stressed plant SOA

TitleViscosity and liquid-liquid phase separation in healthy and stressed plant SOA
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2021
AuthorsSmith, NR, Crescenzo, GV, Huang, Y, Hettiyadura, APS, Siemens, K, Li, Y, Faiola, CL, Laskin, A, Shiraiwa, M, Bertram, AK, Nizkorodov, SA
JournalENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE: ATMOSPHERES
Volume1
Issue3
Pagination140-153
Date PublishedMAR 2021
Abstract

Molecular composition, viscosity, and liquid–liquid phase separation (LLPS) were investigated for secondary organic aerosol (SOA) derived from synthetic mixtures of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) representing emission profiles for Scots pine trees under healthy and aphid-herbivory stress conditions. Model “healthy plant SOA” and “stressed plant SOA” were generated in a 5 m3 environmental smog chamber by photooxidation of the mixtures at 50% relative humidity (RH). SOA from photooxidation of α-pinene was also prepared for comparison. Molecular composition was determined with high resolution mass spectrometry, viscosity was determined with the poke-flow technique, and liquid–liquid phase separation was investigated with optical microscopy. The stressed plant SOA had increased abundance of higher molecular weight species, reflecting a greater fraction of sesquiterpenes in the stressed VOC mixture compared to the healthy plant VOC mixture. LLPS occurred in both the healthy and stressed plant SOA; however, stressed plant SOA exhibited phase separation over a broader humidity range than healthy plant SOA, with LLPS persisting down to 23 ± 11% RH. At RH ≤25%, both stressed and healthy plant SOA viscosity exceeded 108 Pa s, a value similar to that of tar pitch. At 40% and 50% RH, stressed plant SOA had the highest viscosity, followed by healthy plant SOA and then α-pinene SOA in descending order. The observed peak abundances in the mass spectra were also used to estimate the SOA viscosity as a function of RH and volatility. The predicted viscosity of the healthy plant SOA was lower than that of the stressed plant SOA driven by both the higher glass transition temperatures and lower hygroscopicity of the organic molecules making up stressed plant SOA. These findings suggest that plant stress influences the physicochemical properties of biogenic SOA. Furthermore, a complex mixture of VOCs resulted in a higher SOA viscosity compared to SOA generated from α-pinene alone at ≥25% RH, highlighting the importance of studying properties of SOA generated from more realistic multi-component VOC mixtures.

URLhttps://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2021/ea/d0ea00020e#!divAbstract
DOI10.1039/D0EA00020E