Science Inventory

Synthesis and Hydrolysis of Atmospherically Relevant Monoterpene-Derived Organic Nitrates

Citation:

Wang, Y., I. Piletic, M. Takeuchi, T. Xu, S. France, AND N. Ng. Synthesis and Hydrolysis of Atmospherically Relevant Monoterpene-Derived Organic Nitrates. ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY. American Chemical Society, Washington, DC, 55(21):14595-14606, (2021). https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.1c05310

Impact/Purpose:

Understanding the chemistry of nitrogen in the atmosphere is important due to its impact on PM, ozone and NOx levels.  The partition of gas-phase organic nitrates (ONs) to aerosols and subsequent hydrolysis are regarded as important loss mechanisms for ON species. However, the hydrolysis mechanisms and the major factors controlling the hydrolysis lifetime are not fully understood. Reversible reactions including hydrolysis and nitration are reported to explain the hydrolysis of ONs, highlighting the possibility that particulate nitric acid can participate in nitration to generate new nitrogen-containing compounds. These findings demonstrate that ON hydrolysis is a complex reaction that proceeds via different mechanisms and is controlled by various parameters.

Description:

The partition of gas-phase organic nitrates (ONs) to aerosols and subsequent hydrolysis are regarded as important loss mechanisms for ON species. However, the hydrolysis mechanisms and the major factors controlling the hydrolysis lifetime are not fully understood. In this work, we synthesized seven monoterpene-derived ONs and systematically investigated their hydrolysis in bulk solutions at different pH values. The hydrolysis lifetimes ranged from 12.9 min to 8.5 h for allylic primary ON and tertiary ONs, but secondary ONs were stable at neutral pH. The alkyl substitution numbers, functional groups, and carbon skeletons were three important factors controlling hydrolysis rates. Tertiary and secondary ONs were found to hydrolyze via the acid-catalyzed unimolecular (SN1) mechanism, while a competition of SN1 and bimolecular (SN2) mechanisms accounted for the hydrolysis of primary ONs. The consistency of experimental and theoretical hydrolysis rates calculated by density functional theory further supported the proposed mechanisms. Reversible reactions including hydrolysis and nitration were first reported to explain the hydrolysis of ONs, highlighting the possibility that particulate nitric acid can participate in nitration to generate new nitrogen-containing compounds. These findings demonstrate that ON hydrolysis is a complex reaction that proceeds via different mechanisms and is controlled by various parameters.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( JOURNAL/ PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL)
Product Published Date:11/02/2021
Record Last Revised:02/01/2022
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 354034