EGU21-12626
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12626
EGU General Assembly 2021
© Author(s) 2021. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Iodic acid formation and yield from iodine photolysis at the CERN CLOUD chamber

Henning Finkenzeller1,2, Siddharth Iyer3, Theodore K. Koenig1,2, Xu-Cheng He4, Mario Simon5, Joachim Curtius5, Jasper Kirkby5,6, Markku Kulmala4,7, Mikko Sipilä4, Matti Rissanen3, Theo Kurten4, and Rainer Volkamer1,2
Henning Finkenzeller et al.
  • 1University of Colorado Boulder, Department of Chemistry, Boulder, CO, USA (henning.finkenzeller@colorado.edu)
  • 2Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences, Boulder, CO, USA
  • 3Tampere University, Tampere, Finland
  • 4University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland
  • 5Goethe University Frankfurt, Frankfurt, Germany
  • 6CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research, Physics, Geneva, Switzerland
  • 7Beijing University of Chemical Technology, Aerosol and Haze Laboratory, Advanced Innovation Center for Soft Matter Science and Engineering, Beijing, China

Iodine oxoacids are key species involved in the cycling of iodine between the gas- and aerosol phases. Iodic acid (HIO3) nucleates particles more efficiently than sulfuric acid and ammonia at comparable concentrations, and grows them at comparable rates, but the formation mechanism of HIO3 is essentially unknown. As a result, atmospheric models of iodine chemistry are currently incomplete. Proposed precursors for iodine oxoacids include iodine atoms and higher iodine oxides (e.g., I2O2, I2O3, I2O4), but theoretical predictions have not currently been assessed under experimental conditions that approximate the open ocean marine atmosphere. We present results from laboratory experiments at the CLOUD chamber that observe rapid oxoacid formation from photolysis of iodine (I2) at green wavelengths, in the presence of ozone and variable relative humidity (0-80%). Under these (soft) experimental conditions iodine oxide (IO) radical concentrations closely approximate those found in the remote marine boundary layer. A chemical box model is constrained by measurements of I2, ozone, RH, photolysis frequencies (i.e., I2, IO, OIO, HOI, IxOy) and known losses of gases to particles and the chamber walls, and evaluated using time resolved measurements of IO, OIO, and IxOy species in the chamber. Hypothesized mechanisms for HIO3 formation - either proposed in the literature or motivated from our observations - are then discussed in terms of their ability to explain the observed amounts (yield), and the temporal evolution of HIO3. Finally, the atmospheric relevance of the laboratory findings is assessed in context of unique field measurements at the Maido Observatory, La Reunion, during spring 2018, where IO radicals and HIO3 were measured simultaneously in the remote free troposphere.

How to cite: Finkenzeller, H., Iyer, S., Koenig, T. K., He, X.-C., Simon, M., Curtius, J., Kirkby, J., Kulmala, M., Sipilä, M., Rissanen, M., Kurten, T., and Volkamer, R.: Iodic acid formation and yield from iodine photolysis at the CERN CLOUD chamber, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12626, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12626, 2021.

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