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Dive into the research topics where Christian George is active.

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Featured researches published by Christian George.


Nature | 2006

Photosensitized reduction of nitrogen dioxide on humic acid as a source of nitrous acid

Konrad Stemmler; Markus Ammann; Chantal Donders; Jörg Kleffmann; Christian George

Nitrous acid is a significant photochemical precursor of the hydroxyl radical, the key oxidant in the degradation of most air pollutants in the troposphere. The sources of nitrous acid in the troposphere, however, are still poorly understood. Recent atmospheric measurements revealed a strongly enhanced formation of nitrous acid during daytime via unknown mechanisms. Here we expose humic acid films to nitrogen dioxide in an irradiated tubular gas flow reactor and find that reduction of nitrogen dioxide on light-activated humic acids is an important source of gaseous nitrous acid. Our findings indicate that soil and other surfaces containing humic acid exhibit an organic surface photochemistry that produces reductive surface species, which react selectively with nitrogen dioxide. The observed rate of nitrous acid formation could explain the recently observed high daytime concentrations of nitrous acid in the boundary layer, the photolysis of which accounts for up to 60 per cent of the integrated hydroxyl radical source strengths. We suggest that this photo-induced nitrous acid production on humic acid could have a potentially significant impact on the chemistry of the lowermost troposphere.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 1997

Production and decay of ClNO2 from the reaction of gaseous N2O5 with NaCl solution: Bulk and aerosol experiments

Wolfgang Behnke; Christian George; Volker Scheer; Cornelius Zetzsch

The chemistry of N2O5 on liquid NaCl aerosols or bulk NaCl solutions was studied at 291 K by aerosol smog chamber and wetted-wall flow tube experiments. The uptake of N2O5 on deliquescent aerosol was obtained to be (3.2±0.2)×10−2 (1σ error) from the aerosol experiments. In the wetted-wall flow tube we observed that nitryl chloride (ClNO2) is the main product of the reaction at NaCl concentrations larger than approximately 0.5 M and almost the only product at concentrations larger than 1 M. The ClNO2 yield does not depend linearly on the NaCl concentration, especially at small sodium chloride concentrations (i.e., smaller than 1 M). It appeared that a simple mechanism where N2O5 undergoes two reaction channels (hydrolysis and reaction with Cl−) is unable to explain the observed concentration dependence of the product yield. We propose that N2O5 dissociates to NO2+ and NO3− (rate constant kl>104 s−1) mainly. The directly hydrolysis of N2O5 (k3[H2O]) is less than 20% of the total reaction. NO2+ reacts with water to form 2H+ and NO3− (k5) or with Cl− to form ClNO2 (k4). Neglecting the influence of ionic strength we evaluate k4/k5 to be 836±32 (1σ error). Using the wetted-wall flow tube technique, we studied the uptake of nitryl chloride by aqueous solutions containing NaCl. We observed that the uptake coefficient γ decreased from (4.84±0.13)×10−6 on pure water to (0.27±0.02)×10−6 on a 4.6 M NaCl solution. The sharp decrease of γ with increasing salt concentrations is evidence of reversible hydrolysis. ClNO2 dissociates to Cl− + NO2+(k6). In the absence of Cl− we evaluate H ⋅ k61/2 to be 0.44±0.01 mol L−1 atm−1 s−1/2. Finally, we discuss that atomic Cl from photolysis of ClNO2 may play a role in the marine boundary layer at high northern latitudes.


Faraday Discussions | 2005

Photoenhanced uptake of gaseous NO2 on solid organic compounds: a photochemical source of HONO?

Christian George; Rafal Sylwester Strekowski; Jörg Kleffmann; Konrad Stemmler; Markus Ammann

In several recent field campaigns the existence of a strong daytime source of nitrous acid was demonstrated. The mechanism of this source remains unclear. Accordingly, in the present laboratory study, the effect of light (in the range 300-500 nm) on the uptake kinetics of NO2 on various surfaces taken as proxies for organic surfaces encountered in the troposphere (as organic aerosol but also ground surfaces) was investigated. In this collaborative study, the uptake kinetics and product formation rate were measured by different flow tube reactors in combination with a sensitive HONO instrument. Uptake on light absorbing aromatic compounds was significantly enhanced when irradiated with light of 300-420 nm, and HONO was formed with high yield when the gas was humidified. Especially organic substrates containing a combination of electron donors, such as phenols, and of compounds yielding excited triplet states, such as aromatic ketones, showed a high reactivity towards NO2. Based on the results reported a mechanism is suggested, in which photosensitised electron transfer is occurring. The results show that HONO can be efficiently formed during the day in the atmosphere at much longer wavelengths compared to the recently proposed nitrate photolysis.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2003

CAPRAM 2.4 (MODAC mechanism): An extended and condensed tropospheric aqueous phase mechanism and its application

B. Ervens; Christian George; J. E. Williams; G. V. Buxton; G. A. Salmon; M. Bydder; F. Wilkinson; F. Dentener; P. Mirabel; R. Wolke; H. Herrmann

A detailed and extended chemical mechanism describing tropospheric aqueous phase chemistry (147 species and 438 reactions) is presented here as Chemical Aqueous Phase Radical Mechanism (CAPRAM) 2.4 (MODAC mechanism). The mechanism based on the former version 2.3 [Herrmann et al., 2000] contains extended organic and transition metal chemistry and is formulated more explicitly based on a critical review of the literature. The aqueous chemistry has been coupled to the gas phase mechanism Regional Atmospheric Chemistry Modeling (RACM) [Stockwell et al., 1997], and phase exchange accounted for using the resistance model of Schwartz [1986]. A method for estimating mass accommodation coefficients (α) is described, which accounts for functional groups contained in a particular compound. A condensed version has also been developed to allow the use of CAPRAM 2.4 (MODAC mechanism) in higher-scale models. Here the reproducibility of the concentration levels of selected target species (i.e., NO x , S(IV), H 2 O 2 , NO 3 , OH, O 3 , and H + ) within the limits of ± 5% was used as a goal for eliminating insignificant reactions from the complete CAPRAM 2.4 (MODAC mechanism). This has been done using a range of initial conditions chosen to represent different atmospheric scenarios, and this produces a robust and concise set of reactions. The most interesting results are obtained using atmospheric conditions typical for an urban scenario, and the effects introduced by updating the aqueous phase chemistry are highlighted, in particular, with regard to radicals, redox cycling of transition metal ions and organic compounds. Finally, the reduced scheme has been incorporated into a one-dimensional (1-D) marine cloud model to demonstrate the applicability of this mechanism.


Chemical Reviews | 2015

Heterogeneous Photochemistry in the Atmosphere

Christian George; Markus Ammann; Barbara D’Anna; D. J. Donaldson; Sergey A. Nizkorodov

Atmospheric aerosols can be categorized into primary particles, which are directly emitted by their sources, and secondary particles, generated in the atmosphere from gaseous inorganic and organic precursors. For example, atmospheric oxidation of sulfur containing compounds leads to sulfuric acid and its salts, which represent a major secondary inorganic component of atmospheric aerosols. Likewise, oxidation of nitrogen oxides leads to nitric acid or its salts, which are also abundant in aerosols. The ocean surface, which covers three-quarters of the planet, offers a remarkably dynamic and chemically complex surface for interfacial reactions in the marine boundary layer. The porous nature of permanent or perennial snowpacks adds a tremendous amount of surface area, with which the atmosphere interacts. In short, solar radiation can provide the energy to initiate reactions while atmospherically available surfaces or condensed phases may act to reduce the required energy for a given photochemical pathway, for instance, by allowing a longer wavelength for reaction of species associated with a surface or bulk phase environment.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Light changes the atmospheric reactivity of soot

Maria Eugenia Monge; Barbara D'Anna; Linda Mazri; Anne Giroir-Fendler; Markus Ammann; D. J. Donaldson; Christian George

Soot particles produced by incomplete combustion processes are one of the major components of urban air pollution. Chemistry at their surfaces lead to the heterogeneous conversion of several key trace gases; for example NO2 interacts with soot and is converted into HONO, which rapidly photodissociates to form OH in the troposphere. In the dark, soot surfaces are rapidly deactivated under atmospheric conditions, leading to the current understanding that soot chemistry affects tropospheric chemical composition only in a minor way. We demonstrate here that the conversion of NO2 to HONO on soot particles is drastically enhanced in the presence of artificial solar radiation, and leads to persistent reactivity over long periods. Soot photochemistry may therefore be a key player in urban air pollution.


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2007

Light induced conversion of nitrogen dioxide into nitrous acid on submicron humic acid aerosol

Konrad Stemmler; Marieme Ndour; Y.F. Elshorbany; Jörg Kleffmann; Barbara D'Anna; Christian George; Birger Bohn; Markus Ammann

The interactions of aerosols consisting of humic acids with gaseous nitrogen dioxide (NO 2) were investigated under different light conditions in aerosol flow tube experiments at ambient pressure and temperature. The results show that NO2 is converted on the humic acid aerosol into nitrous acid (HONO), which is released from the aerosol and can be detected in the gas phase at the reactor exit. The formation of HONO on the humic acid aerosol is strongly activated by light: In the dark, the HONO-formation was below the detection limit, but it was increasing with the intensity of the irradiation with visible light. Under simulated atmospheric conditions with respect to the actinic flux, relative humidity and NO2-concentration, reactive uptake coefficients γrxn for the NO2→HONO conversion on the aerosol between γrxn <10−7 (in the dark) andγrxn=6×10 were observed. The observed uptake coefficients decreased with increasing NO 2concentration in the range from 2.7 to 280 ppb and were dependent on the relative humidity (RH) with slightly reduced values at low humidity ( <20% RH) and high humidity (>60% RH). The measured uptake coefficients for the NO2→HONO conversion are too low to explain the HONOformation rates observed near the ground in rural and urban environments by the conversion of NO 2→HONO on organic aerosol surfaces, even if one would assume that all aerosols consist of humic acid only. It is concluded that the processes leading to HONO formation on the Earth surface will have a much larger impact on the HONO-formation in the lowermost layer of the troposphere than humic materials potentially occurring in airborne particles. Correspondence to: M. Ammann ([email protected])


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2008

Photosensitized Heterogeneous Chemistry of Ozone on Organic Films

Adla Jammoul; Saso Gligorovski; Christian George; Barbara D'Anna

The interactions of ozone with benzophenone and phenol solid films have been investigated under simulated atmospheric conditions with respect to relative humidity, pressure, temperature, and O3 concentration using a coated flow tube reactor. The steady-state reactive uptake coefficients (gammass) of ozone on benzophenone films ranged from below 10(-6) in dark conditions to approximately 4 x 10(-6) under UV-A irradiation and decreased with increasing O3 concentration in the range 28-320 ppbv. A similar trend was observed for the initial uptake coefficient (gammai) which varied from ca. 1.5 x 10(-6) in the dark to approximately 7 x 10(-6) under UV-A irradiation. The uptake coefficients under irradiation were strongly dependent on the relative humidity (from 5 to 70%), with their lowest values at high humidity (70% RH). The ozone uptakes for multilayer coverage turned out to be independent of the deposited mass of the organic compound. The benzophenone-phenol mixture also showed photoenhanced uptake with a larger steady-state uptake under visible irradiation, approximately 2.9 x 10(-6). Contact angle measurements showed an increase of the organic film hydrophobicity for the benzophenone-phenol mixture upon combined exposure to light and ozone. A linear dependence of the kinetic values on the photon flux has been demonstrated and when extrapolated to the solar spectral irradiance would lead to uptake coefficients of approximately 10(-5). UV-vis analysis and contact angle measurements of the organic film after irradiation and ozone exposure showed relevant changes only in the mixture, with an increase in the hydrophobic character of the film and the appearance of a new absorption band up to 450 nm.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Polluted dust promotes new particle formation and growth

Wei Nie; Aijun Ding; Tao Wang; Veli-Matti Kerminen; Christian George; Likun Xue; Wenxing Wang; Qingzhu Zhang; Tuukka Petäjä; Ximeng Qi; Xiaomei Gao; Xinfeng Wang; Xiu-Qun Yang; Congbin Fu; Markku Kulmala

Understanding new particle formation and their subsequent growth in the troposphere has a critical impact on our ability to predict atmospheric composition and global climate change. High pre-existing particle loadings have been thought to suppress the formation of new atmospheric aerosol particles due to high condensation and coagulation sinks. Here, based on field measurements at a mountain site in South China, we report, for the first time, in situ observational evidence on new particle formation and growth in remote ambient atmosphere during heavy dust episodes mixed with anthropogenic pollution. Both the formation and growth rates of particles in the diameter range 15–50 nm were enhanced during the dust episodes, indicating the influence of photo-induced, dust surface-mediated reactions and resulting condensable vapor production. This study provides unique in situ observations of heterogeneous photochemical processes inducing new particle formation and growth in the real atmosphere, and suggests an unexpected impact of mineral dust on climate and atmospheric chemistry.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Mineral dust photochemistry induces nucleation events in the presence of SO2

Yoan Dupart; Stephanie M. King; Bettina Nekat; A. Nowak; Alfred Wiedensohler; Hartmut Herrmann; Grégory David; Benjamin Thomas; Alain Miffre; Patrick Rairoux; Barbara D’Anna; Christian George

Large quantities of mineral dust particles are frequently ejected into the atmosphere through the action of wind. The surface of dust particles acts as a sink for many gases, such as sulfur dioxide. It is well known that under most conditions, sulfur dioxide reacts on dust particle surfaces, leading to the production of sulfate ions. In this report, for specific atmospheric conditions, we provide evidence for an alternate pathway in which a series of reactions under solar UV light produces first gaseous sulfuric acid as an intermediate product before surface-bound sulfate. Metal oxides present in mineral dust act as atmospheric photocatalysts promoting the formation of gaseous OH radicals, which initiate the conversion of SO2 to H2SO4 in the vicinity of dust particles. Under low dust conditions, this process may lead to nucleation events in the atmosphere. The laboratory findings are supported by recent field observations near Beijing, China, and Lyon, France.

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Abdelwahid Mellouki

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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