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Release of gaseous bromine from the photolysis of nitrate and hydrogen peroxide in simulated sea-salt solutions
Institution:1. Environment Research Institute, Shandong University, Ji''nan, Shandong, China;2. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong, China;1. Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Mississippi, University, MS 38677, USA;2. Department of Physics, Atmospheric Sciences and Geoscience, Jackson State University, PO Box 17660, Jackson, MS 39217, USA;1. State Key Laboratory of Molecular Reaction Dynamics, Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Dalian 116023, China;2. Institute of Theoretical Simulation Chemistry, Academy of Fundamental and Interdisciplinary Science, Harbin Institute of Technology, Harbin 150080, China
Abstract:We have carried out a series of laboratory experiments to investigate the oxidation of bromide (Br?) by hydroxyl radical (radical dotOH) in solutions used to mimic sea-salt particles. Aqueous halide solutions with nitrate or hydrogen peroxide (HOOH) as a photochemical source of radical dotOH were illuminated with 313 nm light and the resulting gaseous bromine (Br*(g)) was collected. While illumination of these solutions nearly always formed gaseous bromine (predominantly Br2 based on modeling results), there was no evidence for the release of gaseous chlorine. The rate of Br*(g) release increased (up to a plateau value) with increasing concentrations of bromide and was enhanced at lower pH values for both nitrate and HOOH solutions. Increased ionic strength in nitrate solutions inhibited Br*(g) release and the extent of inhibition was dependent upon the salt used. In HOOH solutions, however, no ionic strength effects were observed and the presence of Cl? strongly enhanced Br*(g) release.Overall, for conditions typical of aged, deliquesced, sea-salt particles, the efficiencies of gaseous bromine release, expressed as mole of Br*(g) released per mole of radical dotOH photochemically formed, were typically 20–30%. Using these reaction efficiencies, we calculated the Br2(g) release rate from aged, ambient sea-salt particles due to radical dotOH oxidation to be approximately 0.07 pptv h?1 with the main contributions from nitrate photolysis and partitioning of gas-phase radical dotOH into the particle. While our solution conditions are simplified compared to ambient particles, this estimated rate of Br2 release is high enough to suggest that radical dotOH-mediated reactions in sea-salt particles could be a significant source of reactive bromine to the marine boundary layer.
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