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Dive into the research topics where David O. Miller is active.

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Featured researches published by David O. Miller.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2015

Formation of Low Volatility Organic Compounds and Secondary Organic Aerosol from Isoprene Hydroxyhydroperoxide Low-NO Oxidation.

Jordan E. Krechmer; Matthew M. Coggon; Paola Massoli; Tran B. Nguyen; John D. Crounse; Weiwei Hu; Douglas A. Day; Geoffrey S. Tyndall; Daven K. Henze; Jean C. Rivera-Rios; J. B. Nowak; Joel R. Kimmel; Roy L. Mauldin; Harald Stark; John T. Jayne; Mikko Sipilä; Heikki Junninen; Jason M. St. Clair; Xuan Zhang; Philip A. Feiner; Li Zhang; David O. Miller; William H. Brune; Frank N. Keutsch; Paul O. Wennberg; John H. Seinfeld; Douglas R. Worsnop; Jose L. Jimenez; Manjula R. Canagaratna

Gas-phase low volatility organic compounds (LVOC), produced from oxidation of isoprene 4-hydroxy-3-hydroperoxide (4,3-ISOPOOH) under low-NO conditions, were observed during the FIXCIT chamber study. Decreases in LVOC directly correspond to appearance and growth in secondary organic aerosol (SOA) of consistent elemental composition, indicating that LVOC condense (at OA below 1 μg m(-3)). This represents the first simultaneous measurement of condensing low volatility species from isoprene oxidation in both the gas and particle phases. The SOA formation in this study is separate from previously described isoprene epoxydiol (IEPOX) uptake. Assigning all condensing LVOC signals to 4,3-ISOPOOH oxidation in the chamber study implies a wall-loss corrected non-IEPOX SOA mass yield of ∼4%. By contrast to monoterpene oxidation, in which extremely low volatility VOC (ELVOC) constitute the organic aerosol, in the isoprene system LVOC with saturation concentrations from 10(-2) to 10 μg m(-3) are the main constituents. These LVOC may be important for the growth of nanoparticles in environments with low OA concentrations. LVOC observed in the chamber were also observed in the atmosphere during SOAS-2013 in the Southeastern United States, with the expected diurnal cycle. This previously uncharacterized aerosol formation pathway could account for ∼5.0 Tg yr(-1) of SOA production, or 3.3% of global SOA.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Highly functionalized organic nitrates in the southeast United States: Contribution to secondary organic aerosol and reactive nitrogen budgets

Ben H. Lee; Claudia Mohr; Felipe D. Lopez-Hilfiker; Anna Lutz; Mattias Hallquist; Lance Lee; Paul M. Romer; R. C. Cohen; Siddharth Iyer; Theo Kurtén; Weiwei Hu; Douglas A. Day; Pedro Campuzano-Jost; Jose L. Jimenez; Lu Xu; Nga L. Ng; Hongyu Guo; Rodney J. Weber; Robert J. Wild; Steven S. Brown; Abigail Koss; Joost A. de Gouw; Kevin Olson; Allen H. Goldstein; Roger Seco; Saewung Kim; Kevin McAvey; Paul B. Shepson; T. K. Starn; Karsten Baumann

Significance We present online field observations of the speciated molecular composition of organic nitrates in ambient atmospheric particles utilizing recently developed high-resolution MS-based instrumentation. We find that never-before-identified low-volatility organic species, which are highly functionalized, explain a major fraction of the total particle nitrate mass measured by the traditional aerosol mass spectrometer. An observationally constrained box model shows that these organic nitrates are likely derived from oxidation of biogenic hydrocarbons and persist in the particle phase for only a few hours. Given their high rate of loss, their fates have significant implications for the budgets of secondary organic aerosol particles and nitrogen oxides but are currently unknown. Speciated particle-phase organic nitrates (pONs) were quantified using online chemical ionization MS during June and July of 2013 in rural Alabama as part of the Southern Oxidant and Aerosol Study. A large fraction of pONs is highly functionalized, possessing between six and eight oxygen atoms within each carbon number group, and is not the common first generation alkyl nitrates previously reported. Using calibrations for isoprene hydroxynitrates and the measured molecular compositions, we estimate that pONs account for 3% and 8% of total submicrometer organic aerosol mass, on average, during the day and night, respectively. Each of the isoprene- and monoterpenes-derived groups exhibited a strong diel trend consistent with the emission patterns of likely biogenic hydrocarbon precursors. An observationally constrained diel box model can replicate the observed pON assuming that pONs (i) are produced in the gas phase and rapidly establish gas–particle equilibrium and (ii) have a short particle-phase lifetime (∼2–4 h). Such dynamic behavior has significant implications for the production and phase partitioning of pONs, organic aerosol mass, and reactive nitrogen speciation in a forested environment.


Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences | 2016

Testing Atmospheric Oxidation in an Alabama Forest

Philip A. Feiner; William H. Brune; David O. Miller; Li Zhang; R. C. Cohen; Paul S. Romer; Allen H. Goldstein; Frank N. Keutsch; Kate Skog; Paul O. Wennberg; Tran B. Nguyen; Alex P. Teng; J. A. Degouw; Abigail Koss; Robert J. Wild; Steven S. Brown; Alex Guenther; Eric S. Edgerton; Karsten Baumann; Juliane L. Fry

The chemical species emitted by forests create complex atmospheric oxidation chemistry and influence global atmospheric oxidation capacity and climate. The Southern Oxidant and Aerosol Study (SOAS) provided an opportunity to test the oxidation chemistry in a forest where isoprene is the dominant biogenic volatile organic compound. Hydroxyl (OH) and hydroperoxyl (HO_2) radicals were two of the hundreds of atmospheric chemical species measured, as was OH reactivity (the inverse of the OH lifetime). OH was measured by laser-induced fluorescence (LIF) and by taking the difference in signals without and with an OH scavenger that was added just outside the instrument’s pinhole inlet. To test whether the chemistry at SOAS can be simulated by current model mechanisms, OH and HO_2 were evaluated with a box model using two chemical mechanisms: Master Chemical Mechanism, version 3.2 (MCMv3.2), augmented with explicit isoprene chemistry and MCMv3.3.1. Measured and modeled OH peak at about 10^6 cm^(−3) and agree well within combined uncertainties. Measured and modeled HO_2 peak at about 27 pptv and also agree well within combined uncertainties. Median OH reactivity cycled between about 11 s^(−1) at dawn and about 26 s^(−1) during midafternoon. A good test of the oxidation chemistry is the balance between OH production and loss rates using measurements; this balance was observed to within uncertainties. These SOAS results provide strong evidence that the current isoprene mechanisms are consistent with measured OH and HO_2 and, thus, capture significant aspects of the atmospheric oxidation chemistry in this isoprene-rich forest.


Boundary-Layer Meteorology | 1999

The effects of probe-induced flow distortion on velocity covariances : Field observations

David O. Miller; Chenning Tong; John C. Wyngaard

We carried out measurements to test a simple theory of the effect of probe-induced flow distortion on turbulence measurements. We used two three-component sonic anemometers mounted 1.8m apart at a height of 6.7 m. Behind one was a horizontal circular cylinder of radius 0.15 m and length 1.2 m, chosen to model two-dimensional probe-induced flow distortion in the limit where the scale of the turbulence is very large compared to the scale of the probe. The second sonic anemometer measured the undistorted flow. The measured flow-distortion effects on the Reynolds shearing stress and the variances of streamwise and vertical velocity agree well with the theory.


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2015

Observation of isoprene hydroxynitrates in the southeastern United States and implications for the fate of NOx

Fulizi Xiong; Kevin McAvey; Kerri A. Pratt; C. J. Groff; Matthew Hostetler; Mark A. Lipton; T. K. Starn; J. V. Seeley; Steven B. Bertman; Alexander P. Teng; John D. Crounse; Tran B. Nguyen; Paul O. Wennberg; Pawel K. Misztal; Allen H. Goldstein; Alex Guenther; Abigail Koss; Kevin Olson; J. A. de Gouw; K. Baumann; Eric S. Edgerton; Philip A. Feiner; L. Zhang; David O. Miller; William H. Brune; Paul B. Shepson


Atmospheric Environment | 2015

Direct ozone production rate measurements and their use in assessing ozone source and receptor regions for Houston in 2013

Bianca C. Baier; William H. Brune; Barry Lefer; David O. Miller; Douglas K. Martins


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2016

Understanding isoprene photooxidation using observations and modeling over a subtropical forest in the southeastern US

Luping Su; Edward G. Patton; Jordi Vilà-Guerau de Arellano; Alex Guenther; Lisa Kaser; Bin Yuan; Fulizi Xiong; Paul B. Shepson; Li Zhang; David O. Miller; William H. Brune; Karsten Baumann; Eric S. Edgerton; Andrew J. Weinheimer; Pawel K. Misztal; Jeong-Hoo Park; Allen H. Goldstein; Kate Skog; Frank N. Keutsch; John E. Mak


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2017

Higher measured than modeled ozone production at increased NO x levels in the Colorado Front Range

Bianca C. Baier; William H. Brune; David O. Miller; D. R. Blake; Russell W. Long; Armin Wisthaler; Chris Cantrell; Alan Fried; Brian G. Heikes; Steven S. Brown; Erin E. McDuffie; F. Flocke; Eric C. Apel; Lisa Kaser; Andrew J. Weinheimer


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2018

Atmospheric Oxidation in the Presence of Clouds during the Deep Convective Clouds and Chemistry (DC3) Study

William H. Brune; Xinrong Ren; Li Zhang; Jingqiu Mao; David O. Miller; Bruce E. Anderson; D. R. Blake; R. C. Cohen; Glenn S. Diskin; Samuel R. Hall; T. F. Hanisco; L. Gregory Huey; Benjamin A. Nault; J. Peischl; Ilana B. Pollack; Thomas B. Ryerson; Taylor Shingler; Armin Sorooshian; Kirk Ullmann; Armin Wisthaler; P. J. Wooldridge


Archive | 2017

Meteorological sensing systems and methods

Christopher Thad Ulmer; D. Starodubov; Gregory Peng; Rodion Tikhoplav; David O. Miller; Andrew A. Kostrzewski; Koyiro Minakata; Gabriel Kaplan; Tomasz P. Jannson; Edward Patton; Sookwang Ro; Ihor Berezhnyy

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William H. Brune

Pennsylvania State University

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Abigail Koss

Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences

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Philip A. Feiner

Pennsylvania State University

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R. C. Cohen

University of California

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Alex Guenther

University of California

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Karsten Baumann

Georgia Institute of Technology

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