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Creators/Authors contains: "Ezell, Michael"

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  1. Adsorption of organics on surfaces is important in both outdoor and indoor environments. Surfaces can serve as sinks for gas-phase species, act as reservoirs by emitting previously partitioned organics back into the gas phase, and can facilitate heterogeneous chemistry. We report here studies of the uptake and desorption energetics of gas-phase limonene, a volatile and widely-distributed monoterpene, on solid silica nanoparticles using a unique apparatus that allows for temperature programmed desorption (TPD) measurements of surface binding energies as well as Knudsen cell gas uptake measurements. A multiphase kinetic model was applied to these data to provide additional molecular-level understanding of the processes involved. TPD experiments yielded an average desorption energy of 47.5 ± 8.2 kJ mol-1 (±1s, sample standard deviation), the first direct experimental measurement of this parameter over a broad temperature range (150–320 K). Initial net uptake coefficients (0,net) range from (1.7 ± 0.3) ×10-3 (±1s) at 210 K to (2.3 ± 0.4) ×10-4 (±1s) at 250 K, reflecting increased rates of desorption with an increase in temperature combined with increased rates of diffusion and re-adsorption within the pores between adjacent silica nanoparticles. Effective Langmuir constants, which also reflect the effects of pore diffusion and re-adsorption, were determined from the uptake data and vary from (1.8–0.3)×10-13 cm3 molecule-1 over the same temperature range. These results are in excellent agreement with previous studies around room temperature and with theoretical calculations of the energetics of the limonene-silica interaction. The strong attraction between limonene and the polar silica surface shows the importance of including such interactions in models of the atmospheric fates of terpenes both indoors and outdoors. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available July 16, 2026
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  3. Ozonolysis of model nitrogen-containing alkenes shows a wide range of reactivity and formation of toxic products. 
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  6. The neonicotinoid nitenpyram (NPM) is a multifunctional nitroenamine [(R1N)(R2N)C=CHNO2] pesticide. As a nitroalkene, it is structurally similar to other emerging contaminants such as the pharmaceuticals ranitidine and nizatidine. Because ozone is a common atmospheric oxidant, such compounds may be oxidized on contact with air to form new products that have different toxicity compared to the parent compounds. Here we show that oxidation of thin solid films of NPM by gas-phase ozone produces unexpected products, the majority of which do not contain oxygen, despite the highly oxidizing reactant. A further surprising finding is the formation of gas-phase nitrous acid (HONO), a species known to be a major photolytic source of the highly reactive hydroxyl radical in air. The results of application of a kinetic multilayer model show that reaction was not restricted to the surface layers but, at sufficiently high ozone concentrations, occurred throughout the film. The rate constant derived for the O3−NPM reaction is 1 × 10−18cm3⋅s−1, and the diffusion coefficient of ozone in the thin film is 9 × 10−10cm2⋅s−1. These findings highlight the unique chemistry of multifunctional nitroenamines and demonstrate that known chemical mechanisms for individual moieties in such compounds cannot be extrapolated from simple alkenes. This is critical for guiding assessments of the environmental fates and impacts of pesticides and pharmaceuticals, and for providing guidance in designing better future alternatives. 
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