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Dive into the research topics where Kevin P. Wyche is active.

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Featured researches published by Kevin P. Wyche.


Scopus | 2011

Total radical yields from tropospheric ethene ozonolysis

Alam; Marie Camredon; William J. Bloss; Andrew R. Rickard; Timo Carr; Kevin P. Wyche; Karen E. Hornsby; Paul S. Monks

The gas-phase reactions of ozone with alkenes can be significant sources of free radicals (OH, HO(2) and RO(2)) in the Earths atmosphere. In this study the total radical production and degradation products from ethene ozonolysis have been measured, under conditions relevant to the troposphere, during a series of detailed simulation chamber experiments. Experiments were carried out in the European photoreactor EUPHORE (Valencia, Spain), utilising various instrumentation including a chemical-ionisation-reaction time-of-flight mass-spectrometer (CIR-TOF-MS) measuring volatile organic compounds/oxygenated volatile organic compounds (VOCs/OVOCs), a laser induced fluorescence (LIF) system for measuring HO(2) radical products and a peroxy radical chemical amplification (PERCA) instrument measuring HO(2) + ΣRO(2). The ethene + ozone reaction system was investigated with and without an OH radical scavenger, in order to suppress side reactions. Radical concentrations were measured under dry and humid conditions and interpreted through detailed chemical chamber box modelling, incorporating the Master Chemical Mechanism (MCMv3.1) degradation scheme for ethene, which was updated to include a more explicit representation of the ethene-ozone reaction mechanism.The rate coefficient for the ethene + ozone reaction was measured to be (1.45 ± 0.25) × 10(-18) cm(3) molecules(-1) s(-1) at 298 K, and a stabilised Criegee intermediate yield of 0.54 ± 0.12 was determined from excess CO scavenger experiments. An OH radical yield of 0.17 ± 0.09 was determined using a cyclohexane scavenger approach, by monitoring the formation of the OH-initiated cyclohexane oxidation products and HO(2). The results highlight the importance of knowing the [HO(2)] (particularly under alkene limited conditions and high [O(3)]) and scavenger chemistry when deriving radical yields. An averaged HO(2) yield of 0.27 ± 0.07 was determined by LIF/model fitting. The observed yields are interpreted in terms of branching ratios for each channel within the postulated ethene ozonolysis mechanism.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2013

Radical Product Yields from the Ozonolysis of Short Chain Alkenes under Atmospheric Boundary Layer Conditions

Mohammed S. Alam; Andrew R. Rickard; Marie Camredon; Kevin P. Wyche; Timo Carr; Karen E. Hornsby; Paul S. Monks; William J. Bloss

The gas-phase reaction of ozone with unsaturated volatile organic compounds (VOCs), alkenes, is an important source of the critical atmospheric oxidant OH, especially at night when other photolytic radical initiation routes cannot occur. Alkene ozonolysis is also known to directly form HO2 radicals, which may be readily converted to OH through reaction with NO, but whose formation is poorly understood. We report a study of the radical (OH, HO2, and RO2) production from a series of small alkenes (propene, 1-butene, cis-2-butene, trans-2-butene, 2-methylpropene, 2,3-dimethyl-2-butene (tetramethyl ethene, TME), and isoprene). Experiments were performed in the European Photoreactor (EUPHORE) atmospheric simulation chamber, with OH and HO2 levels directly measured by laser-induced fluorescence (LIF) and HO2 + ΣRO2 levels measured by peroxy-radical chemical amplification (PERCA). OH yields were found to be in good agreement with the majority of previous studies performed under comparable conditions (atmospheric pressure, long time scales) using tracer and scavenger approaches. HO2 yields ranged from 4% (trans-2-butene) to 34% (2-methylpropene), lower than previous experimental determinations. Increasing humidity further reduced the HO2 yields obtained, by typically 50% for an RH increase from 0.5 to 30%, suggesting that HOx production from alkene ozonolysis may be lower than current models suggest under (humid) ambient atmospheric boundary layer conditions. The mechanistic origin of the OH and HO2 production observed is discussed in the context of previous experimental and theoretical studies.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2015

Insights into the Formation and Evolution of Individual Compounds in the Particulate Phase during Aromatic Photo-Oxidation

Kelly L. Pereira; Jacqueline F. Hamilton; Andrew R. Rickard; William J. Bloss; Mohammed S. Alam; Marie Camredon; Martyn W. Ward; Kevin P. Wyche; Amalia Muñoz; Teresa Vera; Mónica Vázquez; Esther Borrás; Milagros Ródenas

Secondary organic aerosol (SOA) is well-known to have adverse effects on air quality and human health. However, the dynamic mechanisms occurring during SOA formation and evolution are poorly understood. The time-resolved SOA composition formed during the photo-oxidation of three aromatic compounds, methyl chavicol, toluene and 4-methyl catechol, were investigated at the European Photoreactor. SOA was collected using a particle into liquid sampler and analyzed offline using state-of-the-art mass spectrometry to produce temporal profiles of individual photo-oxidation products. In the photo-oxidation of methyl chavicol, 70 individual compounds were characterized and three distinctive temporal profile shapes were observed. The calculated mass fraction (Ci,aer/COA) of the individual SOA compounds showed either a linear trend (increasing/decreasing) or exponential decay with time. Substituted nitrophenols showed an exponential decay, with the nitro-group on the aromatic ring found to control the formation and loss of these species in the aerosol phase. Nitrophenols from both methyl chavicol and toluene photo-oxidation experiments showed a strong relationship with the NO2/NO (ppbv/ppbv) ratio and were observed during initial SOA growth. The location of the nitrophenol aromatic substitutions was found to be critically important, with the nitrophenol in the photo-oxidation of 4-methyl catechol not partitioning into the aerosol phase until irradiation had stopped; highlighting the importance of studying SOA formation and evolution at a molecular level.


Archive | 2013

Production of the Atmospheric Oxidant Radicals OH and HO2 from the Ozonolysis of Alkenes

William J. Bloss; Mohammed S. Alam; A. R. Rickard; Marie Camredon; Kevin P. Wyche; T. Carr; P. S. Monks

The reactions of ozone with alkenes are of importance within atmospheric chemistry as a non-photolytic source of the oxidant radicals OH, HO2 and RO2. While OH yields are relatively well constrained, few data exist for production of HO2 or RO2. We report direct measurements of total radical yields from a range of small (C2–C5) alkenes, using LIF and PERCA techniques within large simulation chamber experiments. OH yields are found to be consistent with established understanding, while HO2 yields are substantially smaller than previous measurements suggest, but in good agreement with those assumed within current atmospheric chemical mechanisms.


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2009

Distribution of gaseous and particulate organic composition during dark α-pinene ozonolysis

Marie Camredon; J. F. Hamilton; Mohammed S. Alam; Kevin P. Wyche; Timo Carr; Iain R. White; Paul S. Monks; Andrew R. Rickard; William J. Bloss


International Journal of Mass Spectrometry | 2006

Chemical ionization reaction time-of-flight mass spectrometry: Multi-reagent analysis for determination of trace gas composition

Robert S. Blake; Kevin P. Wyche; Andrew M. Ellis; Paul S. Monks


Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry | 2005

Differentiation of isobaric compounds using chemical ionization reaction mass spectrometry

Kevin P. Wyche; Robert S. Blake; Kerry A. Willis; Paul S. Monks; Andrew M. Ellis


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2012

Development and chamber evaluation of the MCM v3.2 degradation scheme for β-caryophyllene

Michael E. Jenkin; Kevin P. Wyche; Corey J. Evans; Timo Carr; Paul S. Monks; M. R. Alfarra; Mark H. Barley; Gordon McFiggans; J.C. Young; Andrew R. Rickard


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2008

Gas phase precursors to anthropogenic secondary organic aerosol: detailed observations of 1,3,5-trimethylbenzene photooxidation

Kevin P. Wyche; Paul S. Monks; Andrew M. Ellis; Rebecca L. Cordell; A. E. Parker; Christopher Whyte; A. Metzger; J. Dommen; Jonathan Duplissy; André S. H. Prévôt; U. Baltensperger; Andrew R. Rickard; Florian Wulfert


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2006

Technical Note: Performance of Chemical Ionization Reaction Time-of-Flight Mass Spectrometry (CIR-TOF-MS) for the measurement of atmospherically significant oxygenated volatile organic compounds

Kevin P. Wyche; Robert S. Blake; Andrew M. Ellis; Paul S. Monks; T. Brauers; R. Koppmann; Eric C. Apel

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Timo Carr

University of Leicester

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