Investigating the composition of organic aerosol resulting from cyclohexene ozonolysis: Low molecular weight and heterogeneous reaction products

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Abstract

The composition of organic aerosol formed from the gas phase ozonolysis of cyclohexene has been investigated in a smog chamber experiment. Comprehensive gas chromatography with time of flight mass spectrometric detection was used to determine that dicarboxylic acids and corresponding cyclic anhydrides dominated the small gas phase reaction products found in aerosol sampled during the first hour after initial aerosol formation. Structural analysis of larger more polar molecules was performed using liquid chromatography with ion trap tandem mass spectrometry. This indicated that the majority of identified organic mass was in dimer form, built up from combinations of the most abundant small acid molecules, with frequent indication of the inclusion of adipic acid. Trimers and tetramers potentially formed via similar acid combinations were also observed in lower abundances. Tandem mass spectral data indicated dimers with either acid anhydride or ester functionalities as the linkage between monomers. High-resolution mass spectrometry identified the molecular formulae of the most abundant dimer species to be C10H16O6, C 11H18O6, C10H14O 8 and C11H16O8 and could be used in some cases to reduce uncertainty in exact chemical structure determination by tandem MS.

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Hamilton, J. F., Lewis, A. C., Reynolds, J. C., Carpenter, L. J., & Lubben, A. (2006). Investigating the composition of organic aerosol resulting from cyclohexene ozonolysis: Low molecular weight and heterogeneous reaction products. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 6(12), 4973–4984. https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-6-4973-2006

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