Identification of missing organic reactivity in the urban troposphere

Lead Research Organisation: University of York
Department Name: Chemistry

Abstract

The international societal response to deteriorating air quality and the changing climate is guided by the predictions of numerical models. These models contain estimates of future emissions of trace gases and aerosols from natural and human activity, their dispersal throughout the atmosphere, and their chemical transformations into a wide range of secondary products. Photo-oxidation in the troposphere is highly complex, and is initiated by short lived radical species, in the daytime dominated by the hydroxyl radical, OH, and at night by either NO3 radicals or ozone. Chemical oxidation cycles remove primary emitted trace species which are directly harmful to humans (e.g. CO) or to the wider environment (greenhouse gases e.g. CH4,). However, many of the secondary products produced by atmospheric photo-oxidation are also directly harmful, for example O3, NO2, acidic and multifunctional species, many of which are of low volatility and are able to partition effectively to the condensed phase, creating secondary organic aerosol (SOA).

In order to calculate the abundance of OH, and hence the lifetimes of other trace gases in the atmosphere, it is necessary to have fundamental knowledge of the rates of reaction of the processes that generate and remove OH. OH reacts with both organic and inorganic species, with the former generating significant uncertainty in any OH calculation, since many thousands of reactive volatile organic compounds (VOCs) exist in air. Practically, it has been impossible to identify all VOCs present in air and even where this has been attempted in a comprehensive manner, kinetic data on reaction rates are often missing. This complexity of VOCs, and limited associated data make it intrinsically difficult to reconcile observed OH concentrations and OH reactivity with model calculations. When attempted, significant mismatches are observed, highlighting some basic flaws in our ability to simulate the chemistry of the troposphere. Recent measurements of OH reactivity, combined with measurements of VOCs, have enabled the magnitude of missing OH sinks to be quantified, but not their chemical identity. Other measurements have shown that many unidentified organic components exist in ambient air when comprehensive two dimensional gas chromatography is used as the measurement technique.

This proposal combines for the first time ultra high resolution VOC measurements developed by Lewis and Hamilton in York with the FAGE free-radical measurement and MCM modelling techniques developed by Heard, Whalley and Rickard in Leeds. We will determine the identity of missing organic material that contributes towards the removal of OH, and assess the formation of degradation products from their oxidation. This will be achieved by coupling comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatography with a time-of-flight mass spectrometer and flame ionization detector with an OH chemical reactor. By exposing ambient air samples to a controlled environment containing enhanced OH radicals, and by observing the relative change of chromatographic peak intensity for unidentified species relative to the change in intensity for known VOC species (and for which the reactivity with OH is known) the OH reactivity of the unidentified species will be determined. The use a mass spectral detector will allow us to positively identify those species which we observe as contributing significantly as OH sinks, and, provide an assessment of the formation rates of secondary products formed. Using a functional group classification of the major species contributing to losses, we will create surrogate parameterized mechanisms for use in the MCM to allow a more accurate description of processes controlling urban OH and O3 Understanding the functionality of the missing reactivity will enable the atmospheric effects upon air quality and climate due to policy changes regarding complex emissions (such as solvent and petrochemical evaporation) to be better assessed.

Planned Impact

One of the main outcomes of this work will be the identification of classes of compounds that are key missing sinks of OH in the urban polluted boundary layer, which consequently will most likely play an important role in local ozone and secondary aerosol formation, and hence have important health implications. The outcomes of this project can be used to focus laboratory kinetic and mechanistic studies on key atmospheric species, the outputs of which can be included into air quality models and help improve emission estimates (e.g. via the National Atmospheric Emissions Inventory) of important primary species. The outcomes of this project will feed directly into the work being carried out by the Air Quality Expert Group (AQEG) to address air quality abatement strategies. The general public will benefit from subsequent policy changes and improvements in air quality.

The results from this project will be communicated to the wider scientific community via publication in high quality journals and presentations at international conferences. Novel state-of-the-art instrumentation will be developed in the project which will help to maintain the impact and international leadership of the UK atmospheric composition community. The investigators are active within the professional societies, for example the Royal Society of Chemistry, and the activities within this project will be publicised via our engagements with them.

A workshop will be held in Leeds towards the end of the project to provide a forum for discussion of (i) the instrumentation developed, (ii) the results obtained from the field campaign including comparison with model calculations, (iii) improved representation of chemical processing of organic material in the MCM, and (iv) an evaluation of the impact on air quality policy and future needs of the community. Representatives from the laboratory, field instrumentation and atmospheric modelling communities will be invited together with stakeholders from the Air Quality Expert Group, National Atmospheric Emissions Inventory, DEFRA and health communities. In this way knowledge exchange will be maximised between the scientific and other stakeholder communities.

Publications

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Dunmore R (2015) Diesel-related hydrocarbons can dominate gas phase reactive carbon in megacities in Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics

 
Description Previous studies of the reactivity of the atmosphere suggests that there are a large numbers of radical sinks that are unmeasured. The aim of this project was to try to identify these. We have developed a novel atmospheric flow reactor to study the loss of organic compounds with OH radicals, the major atmospheric oxidant in most locations. This technically challenging equipment requires state of the art chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry and has gone through at least 3 different iterations to finally get to a working prototype. The instrument has been deployed in a field experiment with the Universities of Leeds and Birmingham to investigate the role of organics in the atmosphere. As a by-product, the instrument is also an efficient method to study atmospheric kinetics, allowing over 50 rate constants to be measured over the course of a single day - something that previously would have taken months. The techniques developed in this project have allowed us to identify the missing reactivity in London and close the reactivity budget during the Clearflo project (See Whalley et al).

Since the original project, the technique has been used in the Clearflo project in London in 2012. We have discovered the important role of diesel emissions for both ozone and SOA formation. We have discovered that the National Atmospheric Emission Inventory severely underestimated the amount of diesel hydrocarbons being emitted to the atmosphere and thus the key role these emissions make to reactive carbon in London. modelling studies have shown that these previously missing diesel emissions can help to eliminate poor model performance for OH reactivity. It also suggests diesel hydrocarbons may account for up to 30 % of SOA in the UK.
Exploitation Route The work has been carried on by a NERC funded SPHERES PhD student and he has published an article (Shaw et al., 2018). Ultimately the rate constants will be made available to the atmospheric community. The aim is to provide a low cost, and quick method of measuring atmospheric rate constants of newly discovered but potentially important reactions.
Sectors Environment

 
Description This research highlighted discrepancies in emissions and impacts from the diesel sector. This new insight has been reflected in the revision of emissions inventories, the Government Clean Air Strategy (2019) and in recent reports into VOCs and indoor pollution, from Chief Medical Officer (2017) and Royal College of Physicians (2019). Informed by the body of research on VOCs from York, the clean air strategy identified key sectors where VOC emissions reductions would support the UK in meeting legal obligations in 2020 and 2030 minimising trans-boundary air pollution as set out in the National Emissions Ceiling Directive and Gothenburg protocol. The impact has been generated from both evidence from specific papers (e.g. Dunmore, Wang), and via direct expert advice provided to Defra, including directly to ministers, and to industry. It has also been disseminated to the public via news articles, including the BBC news website, Wired.com and The Conversation. It has also been included in public engagement events such as the British Science Festival and the RSC Inside the Engine: from Chemistry to Human Health meeting, exploring the chemistry of diesel engine emissions, emissions policy, and how this is affecting human health.
First Year Of Impact 2016
Sector Environment,Transport
Impact Types Societal,Economic

 
Description Air Pollution and Human Health: India
Amount £1,800,000 (GBP)
Funding ID NE/P01643X/1 
Organisation Natural Environment Research Council 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 11/2016 
End 10/2019
 
Description Atmospheric Pollution & Human Health in a Chinese Megacity (APHH China)
Amount £3,250,000 (GBP)
Funding ID NE/N007190/1 
Organisation Natural Environment Research Council 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 01/2016 
End 12/2019
 
Title Atmospheric flow reactor for atospheric kinetics 
Description A new experimental method was developed for the simultaneous study of reactions between multiple different VOCs and OH, the most important daytime atmospheric radical oxidant. This technique is based upon established relative rate concepts but has the advantage of a much higher throughput of target VOCs. By evaluating multiple VOCs in each experiment, and through measurement of the depletion in each VOC after reaction with OH, the OH+VOC reaction rate coefficients can be derived for multiple species simultaneously. Initially, 10 reaction rates were evaluated which were previously unavailable at the elevated reaction temperature of T = 323 (±10)K. This instrument has since been used by a Phd student for their work. 
Type Of Material Improvements to research infrastructure 
Year Produced 2018 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact New rate constants for gas phase raections of atmospheric species. Publications and PhD thesis. 
 
Description Article in The Conversation 
Form Of Engagement Activity A press release, press conference or response to a media enquiry/interview
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Media (as a channel to the public)
Results and Impact Article in The Conversation about "Missing Diesel Emissions" as a result of interview with a UKRI Media Fellow
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2018
URL http://theconversation.com/missing-emissions-arent-counted-as-pollution-but-could-help-kill-you-1031...
 
Description BBC news article of diesel emissions 
Form Of Engagement Activity A press release, press conference or response to a media enquiry/interview
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Media (as a channel to the public)
Results and Impact I took part part in an interview with the BBC for article on my work. This resulted in a number of other media interviews both nationally and internationally.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2015
URL http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-34347873