气溶胶
海水
背景(考古学)
中观
环境化学
海上浪花
环境科学
苯并噻唑
大气(单位)
海洋学
大气化学
化学
气象学
地质学
臭氧
地理
营养物
古生物学
有机化学
作者
Emily B. Franklin,Michael R. Alves,Alexia N. Moore,Delaney B. Kilgour,Gordon A. Novak,Kathryn J. Mayer,Jon S. Sauer,Robert J. Weber,Duyen Dang,Margaux Winter,Christopher Lee,Christopher D. Cappa,Timothy H. Bertram,Kimberly A. Prather,Vicki H. Grassian,Allen H. Goldstein
标识
DOI:10.1021/acs.est.1c04422
摘要
Organic emissions from coastal waters play an important but poorly understood role in atmospheric chemistry in coastal regions. A mesocosm experiment focusing on facilitated biological blooms in coastal seawater, SeaSCAPE (Sea Spray Chemistry and Particle Evolution), was performed to study emission of volatile gases, primary sea spray aerosol, and formation of secondary marine aerosol as a function of ocean biological and chemical processes. Here, we report observations of aerosol-phase benzothiazoles in a marine atmospheric context with complementary measurements of dissolved-phase benzothiazoles. Though previously reported dissolved in polluted coastal waters, we report the first direct evidence of the transfer of these molecules from seawater into the atmosphere. We also report the first gas-phase observations of benzothiazole in the environment absent a direct industrial, urban, or rubber-based source. From the identities and temporal dynamics of the dissolved and aerosol species, we conclude that the presence of benzothiazoles in the coastal water (and thereby their emissions into the atmosphere) is primarily attributable to anthropogenic sources. Oxidation experiments to explore the atmospheric fate of gas-phase benzothiazole show that it produces secondary aerosol and gas-phase SO2, making it a potential contributor to secondary marine aerosol formation in coastal regions and a participant in atmospheric sulfur chemistry.
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