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Award ID contains: 2039788

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  1. 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. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available May 8, 2026
  2. Free, publicly-accessible full text available March 20, 2026
  3. ABSTRACT: Isoprene has the highest atmospheric emissions of any nonmethane hydrocarbon, and isoprene epoxydiols (IEPOX) are well-established oxidation products and the primary contributors forming isoprene-derived secondary organic aerosol (SOA). Highly acidic particles (pH 0−3) widespread across the lower troposphere enable acid-driven multiphase chemistry of IEPOX, such as epoxide ring-opening reactions forming methyltetrol sulfates through nucleophilic attack of sulfate (SO4 2−). Herein, we systematically demonstrate an unexpected decrease in SOA formation from IEPOX on highly acidic particles (pH < 1). While IEPOX-SOA formation is commonly assumed to increase at low pH when more [H+] is available to protonate epoxides, we observe maximum SOA formation at pH 1 and less SOA formation at pH 0.0 and 0.4. This is attributed to limited availability of SO4 2− at pH values below the acid dissociation constant (pKa) of SO42− and bisulfate (HSO4−). The nucleophilicity of HSO4− is 100× lower than SO42−, decreasing SOA formation and shifting particulate products from low-volatility organosulfates to higher-volatility polyols. Current model parameterizations predicting SOA yields for IEPOX-SOA do not properly account for the SO42−/HSO4 − equilibrium, leading to overpredictions of SOA formation at low pH. Accounting for this underexplored acidity-dependent behavior is critical for accurately predicting SOA concentrations and resolving SOA impacts on air quality. 
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  4. Hydroxyl radical (·OH)-initiated oxidation of isoprene, the most abundant nonmethane hydrocarbon in the atmosphere, is responsible for substantial amounts of secondary organic aerosol (SOA) within ambient fine particles. Fine particulate 2-methyltetrol sulfate diastereoisomers (2-MTSs) are abundant SOA products formed via acid-catalyzed multiphase chemistry of isoprene-derived epoxydiols with inorganic sulfate aerosols under low-nitric oxide conditions. We recently demonstrated that heterogeneous ·OH oxidation of particulate 2-MTSs leads to the particle-phase formation of multifunctional organosulfates (OSs). However, it remains uncertain if atmospheric chemical aging of particulate 2-MTSs induces toxic effects within human lung cells. We show that inhibitory concentration-50 (IC50) values decreased from exposure to fine particulate 2-MTSs that were heterogeneously aged for 0 to 22 days by ·OH, indicating increased particulate toxicity in BEAS-2B lung cells. Lung cells further exhibited concentration-dependent modulation of oxidative stress- and inflammatory-related gene expression. Principal component analysis was carried out on the chemical mixtures and revealed positive correlations between exposure to aged multifunctional OSs and altered expression of targeted genes. Exposure to particulate 2-MTSs alone was associated with an altered expression of antireactive oxygen species (ROS)-related genes (NQO-1, SOD-2, and CAT) indicative of a response to ROS in the cells. Increased aging of particulate 2-MTSs by ·OH exposure was associated with an increased expression of glutathione pathway related genes (GCLM and GCLC) and an anti-inflammatory gene (IL-10). 
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  5. Heterogeneous hydroxyl radical (•OH) oxidation is an important aging process for isoprene epoxydiol-derived secondary organic aerosol (IEPOX-SOA) that alters its chemical composition. It was recently demonstrated that heterogeneous •OH oxidation can age single-component particulate methyltetrol sulfates (MTSs), causing ∼55% of the SOA mass loss. However, our most recent study of freshly generated IEPOX-SOA particulate mixtures suggests that the lifetime of the complete IEPOX-SOA mixture against heterogeneous •OH oxidation can be prolonged through the fragmentation of higher-order oligomers. Published studies suggest that the heterogeneous •OH oxidation of IEPOX SOA could affect the organic atmospheric aerosol budget at varying rates, depending on aerosol chemical composition. However, heterogeneous •OH oxidation kinetics for the full IEPOX-SOA particulate mixture have not been reported. Here, we exposed freshly generated IEPOX-SOA particles to heterogeneous oxidation by •OH under humid conditions (relative humidity ∼57%) for 0−15 atmospheric-equivalent days of aging and derived an effective heterogeneous •OH rate coefficient (kOH) of 2.64 ± 0.4 × 10−13 cm^3 molecules−1 s−1. While ∼44% of particulate organic mass of nonoxidized IEPOX-SOA was consumed over the entire 15 day aging period, only <7% was consumed during the initial 10 aging days. By molecular-level chemical analysis, we determined oligomers were consumed at a faster rate (by a factor of 2−4) than monomers. Analysis of aerosol physicochemical properties shows that IEPOX-SOA has a core−shell morphology, and the shell becomes thinner with •OH oxidation. In summary, this study demonstrates that heterogeneous •OH oxidation of IEPOX-SOA particles is a dynamic process in which aerosol chemical composition and physicochemical properties play important roles. 
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