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ABSTRACT: At fixed aerosol acidity, we recently demonstrated that dimers in isoprene epoxydiol-derived secondary organic aerosol (IEPOX-SOA) can heterogeneously react with hydroxyl radical (·OH) at faster rates than monomers. Aerosol acidity influences this aging process by enhancing the formation of oligomers in freshly generated IEPOX-SOA. Therefore, we systematically examined the role of aerosol acidity on kinetics and products resulting from heterogeneous ·OH oxidation of freshly generated IEPOX-SOA. IEPOX reacted with inorganic sulfate aerosol of varying initial pH (0.5, 1.5, and 2.5) in a steady state smog chamber to yield a constant source of freshly generated IEPOX-SOA, which was aged in an oxidation flow reactor for 0−22 equiv days of atmospheric ·OH exposure. Molecular-level chemical analyses revealed that the most acidic sulfate aerosol (pH 0.5) formed the largest oligomeric mass fraction, causing the slowest IEPOX-SOA mass decay with aging. Reactive uptake coefficients of ·OH (γOH) were 0.24 ± 0.06, 0.40 ± 0.05, and 0.49 ± 0.20 for IEPOX-SOA generated at pH 0.5, 1.5, and 2.5, respectively. IEPOXSOA became more liquid-like for pH 1.5 and 2.5, while exhibiting an irregular pattern for pH 0.5 with aging. Using kinetic and physicochemical data derived for a single aerosol pH in atmospheric models could inaccurately predict the fate of the IEPOX-SOA.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available May 8, 2026
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Cooke, Madeline E; Waters, Cara M; Asare, Joel Y; Mirrielees, Jessica A; Holen, Andrew L; Frauenheim, Molly P; Zhang, Zhenfa; Gold, Avram; Pratt, Kerri A; Surratt, Jason D; et al (, ACS ES&T Air)
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Cooke, Madeline E.; Armstrong, N. Cazimir; Lei, Ziying; Chen, Yuzhi; Waters, Cara M.; Zhang, Yue; Buchenau, Nicolas A.; Dibley, Monica Q.; Ledsky, Isabel R.; Szalkowski, Tessa; et al (, ACS Earth and Space Chemistry)
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