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Featured researches published by Joanna Socorro.


Scientific Reports | 2016

The persistence of pesticides in atmospheric particulate phase: An emerging air quality issue.

Joanna Socorro; Amandine Durand; Brice Temime-Roussel; Sasho Gligorovski; Henri Wortham; Etienne Quivet

The persistent organic pollutants (POPs) due to their physicochemical properties can be widely spread all over the globe; as such they represent a serious threat to both humans and wildlife. According to Stockholm convention out of 24 officially recognized POPs, 16 are pesticides. The atmospheric life times of pesticides, up to now were estimated based on their gas-phase reactivity. It has been only speculated that sorption to aerosol particles may increase significantly the half‐lives of pesticides in the atmosphere. The results presented here challenge the current view of the half-lives of pesticides in the lower boundary layer of the atmosphere and their impact on air quality and human health. We demonstrate that semivolatile pesticides which are mostly adsorbed on atmospheric aerosol particles are very persistent with respect to the highly reactive hydroxyl radicals (OH) that is the self-cleaning agent of the atmosphere. The half-lives in particulate phase of difenoconazole, tetraconazole, fipronil, oxadiazon, deltamethrin, cyprodinil, permethrin, and pendimethalin are in order of several days and even higher than one month, implying that these pesticides can be transported over long distances, reaching the remote regions all over the world; hence these pesticides shall be further evaluated prior to be confirmed as POPs.


Science of The Total Environment | 2016

Products and mechanisms of the heterogeneous reactions of ozone with commonly used pyrethroids in the atmosphere

Joanna Socorro; Sylvain R. A. Marque; Brice Temime-Roussel; Sylvain Ravier; Sasho Gligorovski; Henri Wortham; Etienne Quivet

The heterogeneous reactions of gas-phase ozone and two pyrethroid pesticides, deltamethrin and permethrin, which are the most frequently applied insecticides today, has been investigated. Tentative identifications of heterogeneous ozonolysis products of both pesticides reveal that the reaction mechanisms differ and are mainly influenced by the presence of the cyano moiety at the α-position of deltamethrin (pyrethroid type II). The mechanism study also suggests the important role of water. Finally, several of the degradation products emerged from the ozonolysis of deltamethrin and permethrin may pose further health and environmental hazard due to their higher toxicity, such as phosgene for permethrin, and bromophosgene, 3-phenoxybenzaldehyde (3-PBA) and fulminic acid for deltamethrin. The results obtained in this study can contribute to better describe the atmospheric fate of pesticides in the particle phase.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2017

Heterogeneous OH Oxidation, Shielding Effects, and Implications for the Atmospheric Fate of Terbuthylazine and Other Pesticides

Joanna Socorro; Pascale S. J. Lakey; Lei Han; Thomas Berkemeier; Gerhard Lammel; Cornelius Zetzsch; Ulrich Pöschl; Manabu Shiraiwa

Terbuthylazine (TBA) is a widely used herbicide, and its heterogeneous reaction with OH radicals is important for assessing its potential to undergo atmospheric long-range transport and to affect the environment and public health. The apparent reaction rate coefficients obtained in different experimental investigations, however, vary by orders of magnitude depending on the applied experimental techniques and conditions. In this study, we used a kinetic multilayer model of aerosol chemistry with reversible surface adsorption and bulk diffusion (KM-SUB) in combination with a Monte Carlo genetic algorithm to simulate the measured decay rates of TBA. Two experimental data sets available from different studies can be described with a consistent set of kinetic parameters resolving the interplay of chemical reaction, mass transport, and shielding effects. Our study suggests that mass transport and shielding effects can substantially extend the atmospheric lifetime of reactive pesticides from a few days to weeks, with strong implications for long-range transport and potential health effects of these substances.


Artificial Intelligence Review | 2015

Heterogeneous Oxidation Of Pesticides On The Aerosol Condensed Phase

Joanna Socorro; A. Durand; Brice Temime-Roussel; Sylvain Ravier; Sasho Gligorovski; Henri Wortham; Etienne Quivet

Pesticides are widely used all over the world. It is known that they exhibit adverse health effects and environmental risks due to their physico-chemical properties and their extensive use, which is growing every year. They are distributed in the atmosphere, an important vector of dissemination, over long distances away from the target area. The partitioning of pesticides between the gas and particulate phases influences their atmospheric fate. Most of the pesticides are semi-volatile compounds, emphasizing the importance of assessing their heterogeneous reactivity towards atmospheric oxidants. The photolysis processing and heterogeneous reactivity towards O3 and OH, was evaluated of eight commonly used pesticides adsorbed in silica particles. Silica particles are present in airborne mineral dust in atmospheric aerosols, and heterogeneous reactions can be different in the presence of these mineral particles. Depending on their origin and conditioning, aerosol particles containing pesticides can have complex and highly porous microstructures, which are influenced by electric charge effects and interaction with water vapour. Therefore, the kinetic experiments and consecutive product studies were performed at atmospherically relevant relative humidity (RH) of 55%. The identification of surface-bound products was performed using GC-(QqQ)-MS/MS and the gas-phase products were monitored on-line by PTRToF-MS. The obtained results will allow a better understanding of the impact of pesticides and their degradation products on human health, and to make recommendations in order to reduce population exposure to the pesticide plume and the pollution by phyto-sanitary products on the regional scale, which constitutes a necessary step in the development of environmental strategies.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2018

Reactive Oxygen Species Formed by Secondary Organic Aerosols in Water and Surrogate Lung Fluid

Haijie Tong; Pascale Sylvie Jeanne Lakey; Andrea M. Arangio; Joanna Socorro; Fangxia Shen; Kurt Lucas; William H. Brune; Ulrich Pöschl; Manabu Shiraiwa

Reactive oxygen species (ROS) play a central role in adverse health effects of air pollutants. Respiratory deposition of fine air particulate matter can lead to the formation of ROS in epithelial lining fluid, potentially causing oxidative stress and inflammation. Secondary organic aerosols (SOA) account for a large fraction of fine particulate matter, but their role in adverse health effects is unclear. Here, we quantify and compare the ROS yields and oxidative potential of isoprene, β-pinene, and naphthalene SOA in water and surrogate lung fluid (SLF). In pure water, isoprene and β-pinene SOA were found to produce mainly OH and organic radicals, whereas naphthalene SOA produced mainly H2O2 and O2•-. The total molar yields of ROS of isoprene and β-pinene SOA were 11.8% and 8.2% in water and decreased to 8.5% and 5.2% in SLF, which can be attributed to ROS removal by lung antioxidants. A positive correlation between the total peroxide concentration and ROS yield suggests that organic (hydro)peroxides may play an important role in ROS formation from biogenic SOA. The total molar ROS yields of naphthalene SOA was 1.7% in water and increased to 11.3% in SLF. This strong increase is likely due to redox reaction cycles involving environmentally persistent free radicals (EPFR) or semiquinones, antioxidants, and oxygen, which may promote the formation of H2O2 and the adverse health effects of anthropogenic SOA from aromatic precursors.


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2013

Radical mechanisms of methyl vinyl ketone oligomerization through aqueous phase OH-oxidation: on the paradoxical role of dissolved molecular oxygen

Pascal Renard; F. Siekmann; Adrien Gandolfo; Joanna Socorro; G. Salque; Sylvain Ravier; Etienne Quivet; J.-L. Clément; M. Traikia; Anne-Marie Delort; Didier Voisin; V. Vuitton; R. Thissen; Anne Monod


Atmospheric Environment | 2013

Phototransformation of 4-phenoxyphenol sensitised by 4-carboxybenzophenone: Evidence of new photochemical pathways in the bulk aqueous phase and on the surface of aerosol deliquescent particles

Elisa De Laurentiis; Joanna Socorro; Davide Vione; Etienne Quivet; Marcello Brigante; Gilles Mailhot; Henri Wortham; Sasho Gligorovski


Atmospheric Environment | 2015

Heterogeneous reactions of ozone with commonly used pesticides adsorbed on silica particles

Joanna Socorro; Sasho Gligorovski; Henri Wortham; Etienne Quivet


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2016

Quantification of environmentally persistent free radicals and reactive oxygen species in atmospheric aerosol particles

Andrea M. Arangio; Haijie Tong; Joanna Socorro; Ulrich Pöschl; Manabu Shiraiwa


Faraday Discussions | 2017

Reactive oxygen species formed in aqueous mixtures of secondary organic aerosols and mineral dust influencing cloud chemistry and public health in the Anthropocene

Haijie Tong; Pascale S. J. Lakey; Andrea M. Arangio; Joanna Socorro; Christopher J. Kampf; Thomas Berkemeier; William H. Brune; Ulrich Pöschl; Manabu Shiraiwa

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Etienne Quivet

Aix-Marseille University

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Henri Wortham

Aix-Marseille University

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Sylvain Ravier

Aix-Marseille University

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