Theoretical Kinetics studies of isoprene peroxy radical chemistry: The fate of Z-δ-(4-OH, 1-OO)-ISOPOO radical
The OH radical recycling mechanism in isoprene oxidation is one of the most exciting topics in atmospheric chemistry, and the corresponding studies expand our understanding of oxidation mechanisms of volatile organic compounds in the troposphere and provide reliable evidence to improve and develop c...
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Published in | Ecotoxicology and environmental safety Vol. 266; p. 115553 |
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Main Authors | , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Elsevier Inc
01.11.2023
Elsevier |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | The OH radical recycling mechanism in isoprene oxidation is one of the most exciting topics in atmospheric chemistry, and the corresponding studies expand our understanding of oxidation mechanisms of volatile organic compounds in the troposphere and provide reliable evidence to improve and develop conventional atmospheric models. In this work, we performed a detailed theoretical kinetics study on the Z-δ-(4-OH, 1-OO)-ISOPOO radical chemistry, which is proposed as the heart of OH recycling in isoprene oxidation. With the full consideration of its accumulation and consumption channels, we studied and discussed the fate of Z-δ-(4-OH, 1-OO)-ISOPOO radical by solving the energy-resolved master equation over a broad range of conditions, including not only room temperatures but also high temperatures of a forest fire or low temperatures and pressures of the upper troposphere. We found non-negligible pressure dependence of its fate at combustion temperatures (up to two orders of magnitude) and demonstrated the significance of both the multi-structural torsional anharmonicity and tunneling for accurately calculating kinetics of the studied system. More interestingly, the tunneling effect on the phenomenological rate constants of the H-shift reaction channel is also found to be pressure-dependent due to the competition with the O2 loss reaction. In addition, our time evolution calculations revealed a two-stage behavior of critical species in this reaction system and estimated the shortest half-lives for the Z-δ-(4-OH, 1-OO)-ISOPOO radical at various temperatures, pressures and altitudes. This detailed kinetics study of Z-δ-(4-OH, 1-OO)-ISOPOO radical chemistry offers a typical example to deeply understand the core mechanism of OH recycling pathways in isoprene oxidation, and provides valuable insights for promoting the development of relevant atmospheric models.
•By solving the energy-resolved master equation, we discussed the fate of Z-δ-(4-OH, 1-OO)-ISOPOO radical, which is proposed as the heart of OH recycling in isoprene oxidation, covering the temperatures and pressures of troposphere and combustion.•We found significant pressure dependence of the fate of Z-δ-(4-OH, 1-OO)-ISOPOO radical at combustion temperatures. And a pressure-dependent tunneling effect on the phenomenological rate constants of the H-shift reaction consumption channel is found due to the competition between channels.•We observed a two-stage time evolution for the key species and provided the shortest reference half-life for the Z-δ-(4-OH, 1-OO)-ISOPOO radical at different altitudes. |
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Bibliography: | ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 23 |
ISSN: | 0147-6513 1090-2414 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ecoenv.2023.115553 |