Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Osamu Horie is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Osamu Horie.


Atmospheric Environment | 1997

Formation of hydroxymethyl hydroperoxide and formic acid in alkene ozonolysis in the presence of water vapour

Peter Neeb; Frank Sauer; Osamu Horie; Geert K. Moortgat

Abstract Ozonolysis experiments of a series of terminal alkenes were performed to study the products formed in the presence of water vapour. Alkenes investigated were ethene, propene, isobutene and isoprene. Concentrations of the reactants were 4–6 ppmv alkene and 2 ppm ozone. The concentration of water vapour was varied from 0.5 ppmv to 17,000 ppmv. Hydroxymethyl hydroperoxide (HMHP) was found to be the sole product in the reactions of the stabilized Criegee biradical CH2OO with water vapour. The yield of HMHP relative to ozone consumption was measured to be 42% ethene, 14% propene, 13% isobutene and 30% isoprene in the presence of 9,000–18,000 ppmv H2O. HMHP was not stable under the experimental conditions and decomposed to HCOOH and water, presumably via a heterogeneous process. The atmospheric fate of HMHP and the relative rate constants of the CH2OO Criegee biradical with H2O, HCOOH and NOx are discussed.


Journal of Atmospheric Chemistry | 2000

Products and Mechanism of the Gas Phase Reaction of Ozone with β-Pinene

Richard Winterhalter; Peter Neeb; D. Grossmann; Antje Kolloff; Osamu Horie; Geert K. Moortgat

Gas phase ozonolysis of β-pinene was performedin a 570 l static reactor at 730 Torr and 296 K insynthetic air and the products were analysed by acombination of gas phase FTIR spectroscopy, HPLC andIC analyses of gas phase and aerosol samples,respectively. The reaction mechanism was investigatedby adding HCHO, HCOOH and H2O as Criegeeintermediate scavenger and cyclohexane as OH radicalscavenger. Main identified products (yields inparentheses) in the presence of cyclohexane as OHradical scavenger were HCHO (0.65 ± 0.04),nopinone (0.16 ± 0.04), 3-hydroxy-nopinone (0.15± 0.05), CO2 (0.20 ± 0.04), CO (0.030± 0.002), HCOOH (0.020 ± 0.002), the secondaryozonide of β-pinene (0.16 ± 0.05), andcis-pinic acid (0.02 ± 0.01). The decompositionof the primary ozonide was found to yieldpredominantly the excited C9-Criegee intermediateand HCHO (0.84 ± 0.04) and to a minor extent theexcited CH2OO intermediate and nopinone (0.16± 0.04). Roughly 40% of the excitedC9-Criegee intermediate becomes stabilised andcould be shown to react with HCHO, HCOOH and H2O. The atmospherically important reaction of thestabilised C9-Criegee intermediate with H2Owas found to result in a nopinone increase of (0.35± 0.05) and in the formation of H2O2(0.24 ± 0.03). Based on the observed products,the unimolecular decomposition/isomerisationchannels of the C9-Criegee intermediate arediscussed in terms of the hydroperoxide and esterchannels. Subsequent reactions of the nopinonylradical, formed in the hydroperoxide channel, lead tomajor products like 3-hydroxy-nopinone but also tominor products like cis-pinic acid. A mechanismfor the formation of this dicarboxylic acid isproposed and its possible role in aerosol formationprocesses discussed.


Geophysical Research Letters | 1994

Formation of formic acid and organic peroxides in the ozonolysis of ethene with added water vapour

Osamu Horie; Peter Neeb; Stefan Limbach; Geert K. Moortgat

Ozonolysis of C2H4 was carried out in a 580 l glass reaction vessel at 1–5 ppm reactant concentrations, with added water vapour. Under dry conditions ([H2O]0 = 0.5 ppm), HCHO, CO, CO2, (CHO)2O (formic acid anhydride), H2O2, and CH3OOH were identified as the reaction products. Under wet conditions ([H2O]0 = 2 × 104 ppm), HCOOH yields approaching ca. 20% of the converted C2H4, were observed, while no (CHO)2O was formed. Hydroxymethyl hydroperoxide, HOCH2OOH, was observed as the major peroxide, and found to be formed only in the presence of water vapour. Direct reactions of H2O vapour with the excited CH2OO* radicals and with stabilized CH2OO radicals are postulated to explain the formation of HCOOH and HOCH2OOH in the presence of water vapour, respectively.


International Journal of Chemical Kinetics | 1996

Gas‐phase ozonolysis of ethene in the presence of hydroxylic compounds

Peter Neeb; Osamu Horie; Geert K. Moortgat

Ozonolysis of C2H4 was carried out at 295 K in 730 torr synthetic air in the concentration ranges of [O3]0 = 1.9–8.2 ppm and [C2H4]0 = 4.0–15.0 ppm, in the absence and presence of the added HCOOH (1 ppm), CH3COOH (1–10 ppm), and CH3OH (36–100 ppm). In the absence of the added compounds, a nearly complete analysis of the reaction products was achieved, with the yields expressed relative to the converted C2H4: HCHO 0.98, CO 0.26, CO2 0.18, HCOOH 0.05, and the sum of formic acid anhydride (FAN) and hydroperoxymethyl formate (HPMF), CHO(SINGLE BOND)O(SINGLE BOND)CH2OOH, 0.19. In the presence of the added HCOOH, the yield of [FAN + HPMF] increased. The addition of CH3COOH suppressed the formation of FAN and HPMF completely. The addition of large excesses of CH3OH also decreased the yield of [FAN + HPMF] significantly. In both cases, new products with the formula R(SINGLE BOND)O(SINGLE BOND)CH2OOH where R = CH3CO and CH3 for CH3COOH and CH3OH, respectively, were formed. The present results, together with the formation of hydroxymethyl hydroperoxide, HO(SINGLE BOND)CH2OOH, with added water vapor (Horie et al., Geophys. Res. Lett., 21, 1523, (1994)) were explained by the reaction of the Criegee biradical CH2OO with the added hydroxy compounds ROH. Formation of the products with the general formula R(SINGLE BOND)O(SINGLE BOND)CH2OOH indicates that the RO(SINGLE BOND)H bond fission has taken place.


Chemical Physics Letters | 1995

The nature of the transitory product in the gas-phase ozonolysis of ethene

Peter Neeb; Osamu Horie; Geert K. Moortgat

Abstract One of the reactants for the formation of previously identified transitory product in the gas-phase ozonolysis of C 2 H 4 was shown to be HCOOH. The most probable structure of this compound is HOOCH 2 OCHO. Its concentration increased with the addition of HCOOH but decreased with the addition of HCHO which had previously been assumed as one of the reactants. This compound slowly decomposed to formic acid anhydride and water.


Tetrahedron Letters | 1996

Formation of secondary ozonides in the gas-phase ozonolysis of simple alkenes

Peter Neeb; Osamu Horie; Geert K. Moortgat

Secondary propene ozonide and isobutene ozonide were formed in the gas-phase ozonolysis of ethene with added acetaldehyde and acetone, respectively. Combined with the formation of hydroperoxymethyl formate and methoxymethyl hydroperoxide in the ethene-ozone reaction system in the presence of HCOOH and CH3OH, respectively, formation of the secondary ozonides reveals a close similarity between the gas-phase and the liquid-phase ozonolysis of alkenes.


International Journal of Chemical Kinetics | 1997

The reactions of the Criegee intermediate CH3 CHOO in the gas-phase ozonolysis of 2-butene isomers

Osamu Horie; Peter Neeb; Geert K. Moortgat

Ozonolysis of cis- and trans-2-butene isomers were carried out in a 570 l spherical glass vessel in 730 torr synthetic air at 295 ± 3 K. The initial concentrations were 5 to 10 ppmv for the isomers and 2 to 5 ppmv for ozone. Quantitative yields were determined by FTIR spectroscopy for CH3CHO, HCHO, CH4, CH3OH, CO, and CO2. By means of computational subtraction of the spectral contribution of the identified products from the product spectra, residual spectra have been obtained. Formation of 2-butene ozonide, propene ozonide, and l-hydroperoxyethyl formate CH3CH(OOH)(SINGLE BOND)O(SINGLE BOND)CH(O) have been identified in the residual spectra. These products have been shown to be formed in the reactions of the Criegee intermediate CH3CHOO with CH3CHO, HCHO, and HCOOH, respectively. Mechanistic implications and atmospheric relevance of these observations are discussed.


Geophysical Research Letters | 1997

Is the hydroxyl radical formed in the gas-phase ozonolysis of alkenes?

Christian Schäfer; Osamu Horie; J. N. Crowley; Geert K. Moortgat

The hypothesis that OH radicals are generated in the ozonolysis of alkenes was tested by measuring the relative conversion of a pair of alkanes added to selected alkene-O3 systems. The results were compared with OH-initiated relative removal (via H2O2 photolysis) and with the expected relative rates based on literature data. We find that the removal of alkanes is not consistent with their reaction with OH. These results suggest that there is no compelling experimental data in support of OH formation in the ozonolysis of alkenes.


Chemical Physics Letters | 1989

A new transitory product in the ozonolysis of trans-2-butene at atmospheric pressure

Osamu Horie; Geert K. Moortgat

Abstract A previously unidentified transitory species, tentatively assigned as hydroxyethyl formate, CH 3 CH (OH)-O-CHO, was formed as a major product in the ozonolysis of trans-2-butene at atmospheric pressure. A continuous stirred-tank reactor was used to analyze reaction products via molecular-beam sampling and matrix isolation FTIR spectroscopy. CH 3 CHO, HCHO, CO 2 , CO, CH 3 OH, CH 4 and H 2 O were the main, HCOOH and CH 2 CO the minor, products. CH 3 COOH and propene ozonide were detected as trace components.


Chemical Physics Letters | 1981

Production of electronically excited nf radicals in the system NH3-F-O2(1Δg)

W. Hack; Osamu Horie

Abstract Addition of O 2 ( 1 Δ g ) to the reacting mixture of NH 3 and F atoms is found to produce the NF(b 1 Σ + ) radicals, identified by the light emission at 529 and 562 nm. The energy transfer process O 2 ( 1 Δ g ) + NF(a 1 Δ g ) → O 2 + NF(b 1 Δ g ) explains the light emission.

Collaboration


Dive into the Osamu Horie's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge