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Dive into the research topics where P. S. Chhabra is active.

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Featured researches published by P. S. Chhabra.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2010

Chemical Composition of Gas- and Aerosol-Phase Products from the Photooxidation of Naphthalene

Kathryn E. Kautzman; Jason D. Surratt; Man Nin Chan; Arthur W. H. Chan; Scott Hersey; P. S. Chhabra; Nathan F. Dalleska; Paul O. Wennberg; John H. Seinfeld

The current work focuses on the detailed evolution of the chemical composition of both the gas- and aerosol-phase constituents produced from the OH-initiated photooxidation of naphthalene under low- and high-NO(x) conditions. Under high-NO(x) conditions ring-opening products are the primary gas-phase products, suggesting that the mechanism involves dissociation of alkoxy radicals (RO) formed through an RO(2) + NO pathway, or a bicyclic peroxy mechanism. In contrast to the high-NO(x) chemistry, ring-retaining compounds appear to dominate the low-NO(x) gas-phase products owing to the RO(2) + HO(2) pathway. We are able to chemically characterize 53-68% of the secondary organic aerosol (SOA) mass. Atomic oxygen-to-carbon (O/C), hydrogen-to-carbon (H/C), and nitrogen-to-carbon (N/C) ratios measured in bulk samples by high-resolution electrospray ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (HR-ESI-TOFMS) are the same as the ratios observed with online high-resolution time-of-flight aerosol mass spectrometry (HR-ToF-AMS), suggesting that the chemical compositions and oxidation levels found in the chemically-characterized fraction of the particle phase are representative of the bulk aerosol. Oligomers, organosulfates (R-OSO(3)), and other high-molecular-weight (MW) products are not observed in either the low- or high-NO(x) SOA; however, in the presence of neutral ammonium sulfate seed aerosol, an organic sulfonic acid (R-SO(3)), characterized as hydroxybenzene sulfonic acid, is observed in naphthalene SOA produced under both high- and low-NO(x) conditions. Acidic compounds and organic peroxides are found to account for a large fraction of the chemically characterized high- and low-NO(x) SOA. We propose that the major gas- and aerosol-phase products observed are generated through the formation and further reaction of 2-formylcinnamaldehyde or a bicyclic peroxy intermediate. The chemical similarity between the laboratory SOA and ambient aerosol collected from Birmingham, Alabama (AL) and Pasadena, California (CA) confirm the importance of PAH oxidation in the formation of aerosol within the urban atmosphere.


Nature Communications | 2015

Enhanced light absorption by mixed source black and brown carbon particles in UK winter

Shang Liu; A. C. Aiken; Kyle Gorkowski; Manvendra K. Dubey; Christopher D. Cappa; Leah R. Williams; Scott C. Herndon; Paola Massoli; Edward Charles Fortner; P. S. Chhabra; W. A. Brooks; Timothy B. Onasch; John T. Jayne; Douglas R. Worsnop; Swarup China; Noopur Sharma; Claudio Mazzoleni; Lu Xu; Nga L. Ng; Dantong Liu; J. D. Allan; James Lee; Zoe L. Fleming; Claudia Mohr; Peter Zotter; Sönke Szidat; André S. H. Prévôt

Black carbon (BC) and light-absorbing organic carbon (brown carbon, BrC) play key roles in warming the atmosphere, but the magnitude of their effects remains highly uncertain. Theoretical modelling and laboratory experiments demonstrate that coatings on BC can enhance BCs light absorption, therefore many climate models simply assume enhanced BC absorption by a factor of ∼1.5. However, recent field observations show negligible absorption enhancement, implying models may overestimate BCs warming. Here we report direct evidence of substantial field-measured BC absorption enhancement, with the magnitude strongly depending on BC coating amount. Increases in BC coating result from a combination of changing sources and photochemical aging processes. When the influence of BrC is accounted for, observationally constrained model calculations of the BC absorption enhancement can be reconciled with the observations. We conclude that the influence of coatings on BC absorption should be treated as a source and regionally specific parameter in climate models.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2011

Analysis of photochemical and dark glyoxal uptake: Implications for SOA formation

M. M. Galloway; C. L. Loza; P. S. Chhabra; A. W. H. Chan; L. D. Yee; John H. Seinfeld; Frank N. Keutsch

The dependence of glyoxal uptake onto deliquesced ammonium sulfate seed aerosol was studied under photochemical (light + hydroxyl radical (OH)) and dark conditions. In this study, the chemical composition of aerosol formed from glyoxal is identical in the presence or absence of OH. In addition, there was no observed OH dependence on either glyoxal uptake or glyoxal-driven aerosol growth for this study. These findings demonstrate that, for the system used here, glyoxal uptake is not affected by the presence of OH. In combination with previous studies, this shows that the exact nature of the type of seed aerosol, in particular the presence of a coating, has a large influence on fast photochemical uptake of glyoxal. Due to the challenge of relating this seed aerosol dependence to ambient conditions, this work highlights the resulting difficulty in quantitatively including SOA formation from glyoxal in models.


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2010

Organic aerosol components observed in Northern Hemispheric datasets from Aerosol Mass Spectrometry

Nga L. Ng; Manjula R. Canagaratna; Qi Zhang; Jose L. Jimenez; Jian Tian; Ingrid M. Ulbrich; Jesse H. Kroll; Kenneth S. Docherty; P. S. Chhabra; Roya Bahreini; Shane M. Murphy; John H. Seinfeld; Lea Hildebrandt; Neil M. Donahue; P. F. DeCarlo; V. A. Lanz; André S. H. Prévôt; E. Dinar; Yinon Rudich; D. R. Worsnop


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2007

Secondary organic aerosol formation from m -xylene, toluene, and benzene

Nga L. Ng; Jesse H. Kroll; Arthur W. H. Chan; P. S. Chhabra; John H. Seinfeld


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2008

Glyoxal uptake on ammonium sulphate seed aerosol: reaction products and reversibility of uptake under dark and irradiated conditions

M. M. Galloway; P. S. Chhabra; Arthur W. H. Chan; Jason D. Surratt; John H. Seinfeld; Frank N. Keutsch


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2011

Changes in organic aerosol composition with aging inferred from aerosol mass spectra

Nga L. Ng; Manjula R. Canagaratna; Jose L. Jimenez; P. S. Chhabra; John H. Seinfeld; D. R. Worsnop


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2007

Effect of NOx level on secondary organic aerosol (SOA) formation from the photooxidation of terpenes

Nga L. Ng; P. S. Chhabra; Arthur W. H. Chan; Jason D. Surratt; Jesse H. Kroll; Alan J. Kwan; David C. McCabe; Paul O. Wennberg; Armin Sorooshian; Shane M. Murphy; Nathan F. Dalleska; John H. Seinfeld


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2007

Secondary aerosol formation from atmospheric reactions of aliphatic amines

Shane M. Murphy; Armin Sorooshian; Jesse H. Kroll; Nga L. Ng; P. S. Chhabra; C. Tong; Jason D. Surratt; Eladio M. Knipping; John H. Seinfeld


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2008

Secondary organic aerosol (SOA) formation from reaction of isoprene with nitrate radicals (NO 3 )

Nga L. Ng; Alan J. Kwan; Jason D. Surratt; Arthur W. H. Chan; P. S. Chhabra; Armin Sorooshian; Havala O. T. Pye; John D. Crounse; Paul O. Wennberg; John H. Seinfeld

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John H. Seinfeld

California Institute of Technology

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Nga L. Ng

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Arthur W. H. Chan

California Institute of Technology

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Jason D. Surratt

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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C. L. Loza

California Institute of Technology

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Jesse H. Kroll

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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L. D. Yee

University of California

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Paul O. Wennberg

California Institute of Technology

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Man Nin Chan

California Institute of Technology

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