A. L. Corrigan
University of California, San Diego
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Featured researches published by A. L. Corrigan.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2011
David O. De Haan; Lelia N. Hawkins; Julia A. Kononenko; Jacob J. Turley; A. L. Corrigan; Margaret A. Tolbert; Jose L. Jimenez
Reactions of methylglyoxal with amino acids, methylamine, and ammonium sulfate can take place in aqueous aerosol and evaporating cloud droplets. These processes are simulated by drying droplets and bulk solutions of these compounds (at low millimolar and 1 M concentrations, respectively) and analyzing the residuals by scanning mobility particle sizing, nuclear magnetic resonance, aerosol mass spectrometry (AMS), and electrospray ionization MS. The results are consistent with imine (but not diimine) formation on a time scale of seconds, followed by the formation of nitrogen-containing oligomers, methylimidazole, and dimethylimidazole products on a time scale of minutes to hours. Measured elemental ratios are consistent with imidazoles and oligomers being major reaction products, while effective aerosol densities suggest extensive reactions take place within minutes. These reactions may be a source of the light-absorbing, nitrogen-containing oligomers observed in urban and biomass-burning aerosol particles.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2009
David O. De Haan; A. L. Corrigan; Margaret A. Tolbert; Jose L. Jimenez; Stephanie E. Wood; Jacob J. Turley
Glyoxal and methylglyoxal are scavenged by clouds, where a fraction of these compounds are oxidized during the lifetime of the droplet. As a cloud droplet evaporates, the remaining glyoxal and methylglyoxal must either form low-volatility compounds such as oligomers and remain in the aerosol phase, or transfer back to the gas phase. A series of experiments on evaporating aqueous aerosol droplets indicates that over the atmospherically relevant concentration range for clouds and fog (4-1000 microM), 33 +/- 11% of glyoxal and 19 +/- 13% of methylglyoxal remains in the aerosol phase while the remainder evaporates. Measurements of aerosol density and time-dependent AMS signal changes are consistent with the formation of oligomers by each compound during the drying process. Unlike glyoxal, which forms acetal oligomers, exact mass AMS data indicates that the majority of methylglyoxal oligomers are formed by aldol condensation reactions, likely catalyzed by pyruvic acid, formed from methylglyoxal disproportionation. Our measurements of evaporation fractions can be used to estimate the global aerosol formation potential of glyoxal and methylglyoxal via self-reactions at 1 and 1.6 Tg C yr(-1), respectively. This is a factor of 4 less than the SOA formed by these compounds if their uptake is assumed to be irreversible. However, these estimates are likely lower limits for their total aerosol formation potential because oxidants and amines will also react with glyoxal and methylglyoxal to form additional low-volatility products.
Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2012
Carlena J. Ebben; Mona Shrestha; Imee Su Martinez; A. L. Corrigan; Amanda A. Frossard; Wei W. Song; David R. Worton; Tuukka Petäjä; J. Williams; Lynn M. Russell; Markku Kulmala; Allen H. Goldstein; Paulo Artaxo; Scot T. Martin; Regan J. Thomson; Franz M. Geiger
This article summarizes and compares the analysis of the surfaces of natural aerosol particles from three different forest environments by vibrational sum frequency generation. The experiments were carried out directly on filter and impactor substrates, without the need for sample preconcentration, manipulation, or destruction. We discuss the important first steps leading to secondary organic aerosol (SOA) particle nucleation and growth from terpene oxidation by showing that, as viewed by coherent vibrational spectroscopy, the chemical composition of the surface region of aerosol particles having sizes of 1 μm and lower appears to be close to size-invariant. We also discuss the concept of molecular chirality as a chemical marker that could be useful for quantifying how chemical constituents in the SOA gas phase and the SOA particle phase are related in time. Finally, we describe how the combination of multiple disciplines, such as aerosol science, advanced vibrational spectroscopy, meteorology, and chemistry can be highly informative when studying particles collected during atmospheric chemistry field campaigns, such as those carried out during HUMPPA-COPEC-2010, AMAZE-08, or BEARPEX-2009, and when they are compared to results from synthetic model systems such as particles from the Harvard Environmental Chamber (HEC). Discussions regarding the future of SOA chemical analysis approaches are given in the context of providing a path toward detailed spectroscopic assignments of SOA particle precursors and constituents and to fast-forward, in terms of mechanistic studies, through the SOA particle formation process.
Geophysical Research Letters | 2014
R. Zhao; Alex K. Y. Lee; Jeremy J. B. Wentzell; A. M. Mcdonald; Desiree Toom-Sauntry; W. R. Leaitch; R. L. Modini; A. L. Corrigan; Lynn M. Russell; Kevin J. Noone; J. C. Schroder; Allan K. Bertram; Lelia N. Hawkins; J. P. D. Abbatt; John Liggio
Although isocyanic acid (HNCO) may cause a variety of health issues via protein carbamylation and has been proposed as a key compound in smoke-related health issues, our understanding of the atmospheric sources and fate of this toxic compound is currently incomplete. To address these issues, a field study was conducted at Mount Soledad, La Jolla, CA, to investigate partitioning of HNCO to clouds and fogs using an Acetate Chemical Ionization Mass Spectrometer coupled to a ground-based counterflow virtual impactor. The first field evidence of cloud partitioning of HNCO is presented, demonstrating that HNCO is dissolved in cloudwater more efficiently than expected based on the effective Henrys law solubility. The measurements also indicate evidence for a secondary, photochemical source of HNCO in ambient air at this site.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2016
Lelia N. Hawkins; Amanda N. Lemire; M. M. Galloway; A. L. Corrigan; Jacob J. Turley; Brenna M. Espelien; David O. De Haan
The reported optical, physical, and chemical properties of aqueous Maillard reaction mixtures of small aldehydes (glyoxal, methylglyoxal, and glycolaldehyde) with ammonium sulfate and amines are compared with those of aqueous extracts of ambient aerosol (water-soluble organic carbon, WSOC) and the humic-like substances (HULIS) fraction of WSOC. Using a combination of new and previously published measurements, we examine fluorescence, X-ray absorbance, UV/vis, and IR spectra, complex refractive indices, (1)H and (13)C NMR spectra, thermograms, aerosol and electrospray ionization mass spectra, surface activity, and hygroscopicity. Atmospheric WSOC and HULIS encompass a range of properties, but in almost every case aqueous aldehyde-amine reaction mixtures are squarely within this range. Notable exceptions are the higher UV/visible absorbance wavelength dependence (Angström coefficients) observed for methylglyoxal reaction mixtures, the lack of surface activity of glyoxal reaction mixtures, and the higher N/C ratios of aldehyde-amine reaction products relative to atmospheric WSOC and HULIS extracts. The overall optical, physical, and chemical similarities are consistent with, but not demonstrative of, Maillard chemistry being a significant secondary source of atmospheric HULIS. However, the higher N/C ratios of aldehyde-amine reaction products limits the source strength to ≤50% of atmospheric HULIS, assuming that other sources of HULIS incorporate only negligible quantities of nitrogen.
19th International Conference on Nucleation and Atmospheric Aerosols, ICNAA 2013 | 2013
Lynn M. Russell; Armin Sorooshian; John H. Seinfeld; Bruce A. Albrecht; Athanasios Nenes; W. Richard Leaitch; A. M. Macdonald; Lars Ahlm; Yi-Chun Chen; Matthew M. Coggon; A. L. Corrigan; J. S. Craven; Amanda A. Frossard; Lelia N. Hawkins; Haflidi H. Jonsson; Eunsil Jung; Jack J. Lin; A. R. Metcalf; R. L. Modini; Johannes Mülmenstädt; Greg C. Roberts; Taylor Shingler; Siwon Song; Zhen Wang; Anna Wonaschütz
Aerosol particles in the marine boundary layer include primary organic and salt particles from sea spray and combustion-derived particles from ships and coastal cities. These particle types serve as nuclei for marine cloud droplet activation, although the particles that activate depend on the particle size and composition as well as the supersaturation that results from cloud updraft velocities. The Eastern Pacific Emitted Aerosol Cloud Experiment (EPEACE) 2011 was a targeted aircraft campaign to assess how different particle types nucleate cloud droplets. As part of E-PEACE 2011, we studied the role of marine particles as cloud droplet nuclei and used emitted particle sources to separate particle-induced feedbacks from dynamical variability. The emitted particle sources included shipboard smoke-generated particles with 0.05-1 μm diameters (which produced tracks measured by satellite and had drop composition characteristic of organic smoke) and combustion particles from container ships with 0.05-0.2 μm diameters (which were measured in a variety of conditions with droplets containing both organic and sulfate components) [1]. Three central aspects of the collaborative E-PEACE results are: (1) the size and chemical composition of the emitted smoke particles compared to ship-track-forming cargo ship emissions as well as background marine particles, with particular attention to the role of organic particles, (2) the characteristics of cloud track formation for smoke and cargo ships, as well as the role of multi-layered low clouds, and (3) the implications of these findings for quantifying aerosol indirect effects. For comparison with the E-PEACE results, the preliminary results of the Stratocumulus Observations of Los-Angeles Emissions Derived Aerosol-Droplets (SOLEDAD) 2012 provided evidence of the cloud-nucleating roles of both marine organic particles and coastal urban pollution, with simultaneous measurements of the effective supersaturations of the clouds in the California coastal region.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2013
Patrick L. Hayes; Amber M. Ortega; Michael J. Cubison; Karl D. Froyd; Yongjing Zhao; Steven S. Cliff; Weiwei Hu; D. W. Toohey; James Flynn; Barry Lefer; N. Grossberg; S. Alvarez; Bernhard Rappenglück; J. W. Taylor; J. D. Allan; John S. Holloway; J. B. Gilman; William C. Kuster; J. A. de Gouw; Paola Massoli; Xiaolu Zhang; Jun Liu; Rodney J. Weber; A. L. Corrigan; Lynn M. Russell; Gabriel Isaacman; David R. Worton; Nathan M. Kreisberg; Allen H. Goldstein; Ryan Thalman
Environmental Science & Technology | 2009
David O. De Haan; A. L. Corrigan; Kyle W. Smith; Daniel R. Stroik; Jacob J. Turley; Frances E. Lee; Margaret A. Tolbert; Jose L. Jimenez; Kyle E. Cordova; Grant R. Ferrell
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2011
P. S. Chhabra; Nga L. Ng; Manjula R. Canagaratna; A. L. Corrigan; Lynn M. Russell; D. R. Worsnop; John H. Seinfeld
Environmental Science & Technology | 2008
A. L. Corrigan; S. W. Hanley; David O. De Haan
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Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences
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