4-Methyl-5-nitrocatechol

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CAS: 68906-21-8
MF: C7H7NO4
MW: 169.13478
Synonyms: 4-Methyl-5-nitrocatechol

REPORT BY

Jacqueline F. Hamilton

University of York
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Co-reporter: Kelly L. Pereira, Jacqueline F. Hamilton, Andrew R. Rickard, William J. Bloss, Mohammed S. Alam, Marie Camredon, Martyn W. Ward, Kevin P. Wyche, Amalia Muñoz, Teresa Vera, Mónica Vázquez, Esther Borrás, and Milagros Ródenas
pp: 13168
Publication Date(Web):October 16, 2015
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.5b03377
Secondary organic aerosol (SOA) is well-known to have adverse effects on air quality and human health. However, the dynamic mechanisms occurring during SOA formation and evolution are poorly understood. The time-resolved SOA composition formed during the photo-oxidation of three aromatic compounds, methyl chavicol, toluene and 4-methyl catechol, were investigated at the European Photoreactor. SOA was collected using a particle into liquid sampler and analyzed offline using state-of-the-art mass spectrometry to produce temporal profiles of individual photo-oxidation products. In the photo-oxidation of methyl chavicol, 70 individual compounds were characterized and three distinctive temporal profile shapes were observed. The calculated mass fraction (Ci,aer/COA) of the individual SOA compounds showed either a linear trend (increasing/decreasing) or exponential decay with time. Substituted nitrophenols showed an exponential decay, with the nitro-group on the aromatic ring found to control the formation and loss of these species in the aerosol phase. Nitrophenols from both methyl chavicol and toluene photo-oxidation experiments showed a strong relationship with the NO2/NO (ppbv/ppbv) ratio and were observed during initial SOA growth. The location of the nitrophenol aromatic substitutions was found to be critically important, with the nitrophenol in the photo-oxidation of 4-methyl catechol not partitioning into the aerosol phase until irradiation had stopped; highlighting the importance of studying SOA formation and evolution at a molecular level.