The dark reaction of NO, and HzO vapor in 1 atm of air was studied for the purpose of elucidating the recently discussed unknown radical source in smog chambers. Nitrous acid and nitric oxide were found to be formed by the reaction of NO2 and H2O in an evacuable and bakable smog chamber. No nitric a
An investigation of the dark formation of nitrous acid in environmental chambers
β Scribed by James N. Pitts JR; Eugenio Sanhueza; Roger Atkinson; William P. L. Carter; Arthur M. Winer; Geoffrey W. Harris; Christopher N. Plum
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1984
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 915 KB
- Volume
- 16
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0538-8066
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β¦ Synopsis
The formation of nitrous acid (HONO) in the dark from initial concentrations of NO, of 0.1-20 ppm in air, and the concurrent disappearance of NO,, were monitored quantitatively by UV differential optical absorption spectroscopy in two different environmental chambers of ca.4300-and 5800-L volume (both with surface/volume ratios of 3.4 m I ) . In these environmental chambers the initial HONO formation rate was first order in the NO, concentration and increased with the water vapor concentration. However, the HONO formation rate was independent of the NO concentration and relatively insensitive to temperature. The initial pseudo-first-order consumption rate of NO, was (2.8 2 1.2) x min-' in the 5800-L Teflon-coated evacuable chamber and (1.6 t-0.5) x lo-' min-' in a 4300-L all-Teflon reaction chamber at ca.300 K and ca.50%
RH. The initial HONO yields were ca.40-50% of the NO, reacted in the evacuable chamber and ca.10-30% in the all-Teflon chamber. Nitric oxide formation was observed during the later stages of the reaction in the evacuable chamber, but ca.50% of the nitrogen could not be accounted for, and gas phase HNO, was not detected. The implications of these data concerning radical sources in environmental chamber irradiations of NO,organic-air mixtures, and of HONO formation in polluted atmospheres, are discussed.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The surface reaction of NO2 and H 2 0 vapor to emit HONO into the gas phase was studied in the evacuable and bakeable photochemical chamber under the irradiation of UV-visible light ( 2 290 nm). Kinetic analysis of the NO, NOz, and HONO with the aid of computer modeling strongly suggested that the f