Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics (Jun 2013)

Secondary organic aerosol formation from idling gasoline passenger vehicle emissions investigated in a smog chamber

  • E. Z. Nordin,
  • A. C. Eriksson,
  • P. Roldin,
  • P. T. Nilsson,
  • J. E. Carlsson,
  • M. K. Kajos,
  • H. Hellén,
  • C. Wittbom,
  • J. Rissler,
  • J. Löndahl,
  • E. Swietlicki,
  • B. Svenningsson,
  • M. Bohgard,
  • M. Kulmala,
  • M. Hallquist,
  • J. H. Pagels

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-13-6101-2013
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 12
pp. 6101 – 6116

Abstract

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Gasoline vehicles have recently been pointed out as potentially the main source of anthropogenic secondary organic aerosol (SOA) in megacities. However, there is a lack of laboratory studies to systematically investigate SOA formation in real-world exhaust. In this study, SOA formation from pure aromatic precursors, idling and cold start gasoline exhaust from three passenger vehicles (EURO2–EURO4) were investigated with photo-oxidation experiments in a 6 m3 smog chamber. The experiments were carried out down to atmospherically relevant organic aerosol mass concentrations. The characterization instruments included a high-resolution aerosol mass spectrometer and a proton transfer mass spectrometer. It was found that gasoline exhaust readily forms SOA with a signature aerosol mass spectrum similar to the oxidized organic aerosol that commonly dominates the organic aerosol mass spectra downwind of urban areas. After a cumulative OH exposure of ~5 × 106 cm−3 h, the formed SOA was 1–2 orders of magnitude higher than the primary OA emissions. The SOA mass spectrum from a relevant mixture of traditional light aromatic precursors gave f43 (mass fraction at m/z = 43), approximately two times higher than to the gasoline SOA. However O : C and H : C ratios were similar for the two cases. Classical C6–C9 light aromatic precursors were responsible for up to 60% of the formed SOA, which is significantly higher than for diesel exhaust. Important candidates for additional precursors are higher-order aromatic compounds such as C10 and C11 light aromatics, naphthalene and methyl-naphthalenes. We conclude that approaches using only light aromatic precursors give an incomplete picture of the magnitude of SOA formation and the SOA composition from gasoline exhaust.