M. Xiao
Paul Scherrer Institute
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Publication
Featured researches published by M. Xiao.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2018
Dominik Stolzenburg; Lukas Fischer; A. Vogel; Martin Heinritzi; Meredith Schervish; Mario Simon; Andrea Christine Wagner; Lubna Dada; Lauri Ahonen; A. Amorim; Andrea Baccarini; Paulus Salomon Bauer; Bernhard Baumgartner; Anton Bergen; Federico Bianchi; Martin Breitenlechner; Sophia Brilke; Stephany Buenrostro Mazon; Dexian Chen; Antonio Dias; Danielle C. Draper; Jonathan Duplissy; Imad El Haddad; Henning Finkenzeller; Carla Frege; Claudia Fuchs; Olga Garmash; H. Gordon; Xucheng He; Johanna Helm
Significance Aerosol particles can form and grow by gas-to-particle conversion and eventually act as seeds for cloud droplets, influencing global climate. Volatile organic compounds emitted from plants are oxidized in the atmosphere, and the resulting products drive particle growth. We measure particle growth by oxidized biogenic vapors with a well-controlled laboratory setup over a wide range of tropospheric temperatures. While higher temperatures lead to increased reaction rates and concentrations of highly oxidized molecules, lower temperatures allow additional, but less oxidized, species to condense. We measure rapid growth over the full temperature range of our study, indicating that organics play an important role in aerosol growth throughout the troposphere. Our finding will help to sharpen the predictions of global aerosol models. Nucleation and growth of aerosol particles from atmospheric vapors constitutes a major source of global cloud condensation nuclei (CCN). The fraction of newly formed particles that reaches CCN sizes is highly sensitive to particle growth rates, especially for particle sizes <10 nm, where coagulation losses to larger aerosol particles are greatest. Recent results show that some oxidation products from biogenic volatile organic compounds are major contributors to particle formation and initial growth. However, whether oxidized organics contribute to particle growth over the broad span of tropospheric temperatures remains an open question, and quantitative mass balance for organic growth has yet to be demonstrated at any temperature. Here, in experiments performed under atmospheric conditions in the Cosmics Leaving Outdoor Droplets (CLOUD) chamber at the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN), we show that rapid growth of organic particles occurs over the range from −25 °C to 25 °C. The lower extent of autoxidation at reduced temperatures is compensated by the decreased volatility of all oxidized molecules. This is confirmed by particle-phase composition measurements, showing enhanced uptake of relatively less oxygenated products at cold temperatures. We can reproduce the measured growth rates using an aerosol growth model based entirely on the experimentally measured gas-phase spectra of oxidized organic molecules obtained from two complementary mass spectrometers. We show that the growth rates are sensitive to particle curvature, explaining widespread atmospheric observations that particle growth rates increase in the single-digit-nanometer size range. Our results demonstrate that organic vapors can contribute to particle growth over a wide range of tropospheric temperatures from molecular cluster sizes onward.
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2016
Carlo Bozzetti; Yuliya Sosedova; M. Xiao; Kaspar R. Daellenbach; Vidmantas Ulevicius; Vadimas Dudoitis; Genrik Mordas; Steigvilė Byčenkienė; Kristina Plauškaitė; Athanasia Vlachou; Benjamin Golly; Benjamin Chazeau; Jean-Luc Besombes; Urs Baltensperger; Jean-Luc Jaffrezo; Jay G. Slowik; Imad El Haddad; And André S. H. Prévôt
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2017
Carla Frege; Ismael K. Ortega; Matti P. Rissanen; Arnaud P. Praplan; Gerhard Steiner; Martin Heinritzi; Lauri Ahonen; A. Amorim; Anne-Kathrin Bernhammer; Federico Bianchi; Sophia Brilke; Martin Breitenlechner; Lubna Dada; Antonio Dias; Jonathan Duplissy; Sebastian Ehrhart; Imad El-Haddad; Lukas Fischer; Claudia Fuchs; Olga Garmash; Marc Gonin; Armin Hansel; C. R. Hoyle; Tuija Jokinen; Heikki Junninen; J. Kirkby; Andreas Kürten; Katrianne Lehtipalo; Markus Leiminger; Roy L. Mauldin
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2017
Robert Wagner; Chao Yan; Katrianne Lehtipalo; Jonathan Duplissy; Tuomo Nieminen; Juha Kangasluoma; Lauri Ahonen; Lubna Dada; Jenni Kontkanen; H. E. Manninen; Antonio Dias; A. Amorim; Paulus Salomon Bauer; Anton Bergen; Anne-Kathrin Bernhammer; Federico Bianchi; Sophia Brilke; Stephany Buenrostro Mazon; Xuemeng Chen; Danielle C. Draper; Lukas Fischer; Carla Frege; Claudia Fuchs; Olga Garmash; H. Gordon; Jani Hakala; Liine Heikkinen; Martin Heinritzi; Victoria Hofbauer; C. R. Hoyle