Rapid Sulfate Formation via Uncatalyzed Autoxidation of Sulfur Dioxide in Aerosol Microdroplets

Zhe Chen, Pai Liu*, Weigang Wang, Xue Cao, Yu Xin Liu, Yun Hong Zhang*, Maofa Ge*

*Corresponding author for this work

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Abstract

Severe winter haze events in Beijing and North China Plain are characterized by rapid production of sulfate aerosols with unresolved mechanisms. Oxidation of SO2by O2in the absence of metal catalysts (uncatalyzed autoxidation) represents the most ubiquitous SO2conversion pathway in the atmosphere. However, this reaction has long been regarded as too slow to be atmospherically meaningful. This traditional view was based on the kinetic studies conducted in bulk dilute solutions that mimic cloudwater but deviate from urban aerosols. Here, we directly measure the sulfate formation rate via uncatalyzed SO2autoxidation in single (NH4)2SO4microdroplets, by using an aerosol optical tweezer coupled with a cavity-enhanced Raman spectroscopy technique. We find that the aqueous reaction of uncatalyzed SO2autoxidation is accelerated by two orders of magnitude at the high ionic strength (∼36 molal) conditions in the supersaturated aerosol water. Furthermore, at acidic conditions (pH 3.5-4.5), uncatalyzed autoxidation predominately occurs on droplet surface, with a reaction rate unconstrained by SO2solubility. With these rate enhancements, we estimate that the uncatalyzed SO2autoxidation in aerosols can produce sulfate at a rate up to 0.20 μg m-3hr-1, under the winter air pollution condition in Beijing.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)7637-7646
Number of pages10
JournalEnvironmental Science and Technology
Volume56
Issue number12
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 21 Jun 2022

Keywords

  • Beijing haze
  • SOconversion
  • autoxidation
  • kinetic salt effects
  • sulfate aerosols

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Chen, Z., Liu, P., Wang, W., Cao, X., Liu, Y. X., Zhang, Y. H., & Ge, M. (2022). Rapid Sulfate Formation via Uncatalyzed Autoxidation of Sulfur Dioxide in Aerosol Microdroplets. Environmental Science and Technology, 56(12), 7637-7646. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.2c00112