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Dive into the research topics where R. J. Weber is active.

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Featured researches published by R. J. Weber.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Elucidating secondary organic aerosol from diesel and gasoline vehicles through detailed characterization of organic carbon emissions

D. R. Gentner; Gabriel Isaacman; David R. Worton; A. W. H. Chan; Timothy R. Dallmann; Laura E. Davis; Shang Liu; Douglas A. Day; Lynn M. Russell; Kevin R. Wilson; R. J. Weber; A. Guha; Robert A. Harley; Allen H. Goldstein

Emissions from gasoline and diesel vehicles are predominant anthropogenic sources of reactive gas-phase organic carbon and key precursors to secondary organic aerosol (SOA) in urban areas. Their relative importance for aerosol formation is a controversial issue with implications for air quality control policy and public health. We characterize the chemical composition, mass distribution, and organic aerosol formation potential of emissions from gasoline and diesel vehicles, and find diesel exhaust is seven times more efficient at forming aerosol than gasoline exhaust. However, both sources are important for air quality; depending on a region’s fuel use, diesel is responsible for 65% to 90% of vehicular-derived SOA, with substantial contributions from aromatic and aliphatic hydrocarbons. Including these insights on source characterization and SOA formation will improve regional pollution control policies, fuel regulations, and methodologies for future measurement, laboratory, and modeling studies.


Science | 2013

Active atmosphere-ecosystem exchange of the vast majority of detected volatile organic compounds.

Jeong-Hoo Park; Allen H. Goldstein; J. Timkovsky; Silvano Fares; R. J. Weber; John F. Karlik; R. Holzinger

Two-Way Street Most studies of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) found in the atmosphere, which play important roles in atmospheric chemistry, have concentrated on dominant species such as isoprene. There are thousands of other classes of VOCs, and how they are exchanged between the biosphere and the atmosphere is unclear. Park et al. (p. 643) measured the fluxes of more than 500 types of VOCs using a highly sensitive type of mass spectrometry and an absolute value eddy covariance method. The majority of these species were actively exchanged between the atmosphere and the biosphere, with more than a quarter showing net deposition. These results should help to improve air quality and global climate models, and strengthen our understanding of atmospheric VOC chemistry. Many volatile organic compounds emitted by vegetation are actively exchanged between plants and the atmosphere. Numerous volatile organic compounds (VOCs) exist in Earth’s atmosphere, most of which originate from biogenic emissions. Despite VOCs’ critical role in tropospheric chemistry, studies for evaluating their atmosphere-ecosystem exchange (emission and deposition) have been limited to a few dominant compounds owing to a lack of appropriate measurement techniques. Using a high–mass resolution proton transfer reaction–time of flight–mass spectrometer and an absolute value eddy-covariance method, we directly measured 186 organic ions with net deposition, and 494 that have bidirectional flux. This observation of active atmosphere-ecosystem exchange of the vast majority of detected VOCs poses a challenge to current emission, air quality, and global climate models, which do not account for this extremely large range of compounds. This observation also provides new insight for understanding the atmospheric VOC budget.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2013

Observational insights into aerosol formation from isoprene.

David R. Worton; Jason D. Surratt; Brian W. Lafranchi; A. W. H. Chan; Yunliang Zhao; R. J. Weber; Jeong Hoo Park; J. B. Gilman; Joost A. de Gouw; Changhyoun Park; Gunnar W. Schade; Melinda R. Beaver; Jason M. St. Clair; John D. Crounse; Paul O. Wennberg; Glenn M. Wolfe; Sara Harrold; Joel A. Thornton; Delphine K. Farmer; Kenneth S. Docherty; Michael J. Cubison; Jose L. Jimenez; Amanda A. Frossard; Lynn M. Russell; Kasper Kristensen; Marianne Glasius; Jingqiu Mao; Xinrong Ren; William H. Brune; E. C. Browne

Atmospheric photooxidation of isoprene is an important source of secondary organic aerosol (SOA) and there is increasing evidence that anthropogenic oxidant emissions can enhance this SOA formation. In this work, we use ambient observations of organosulfates formed from isoprene epoxydiols (IEPOX) and methacrylic acid epoxide (MAE) and a broad suite of chemical measurements to investigate the relative importance of nitrogen oxide (NO/NO2) and hydroperoxyl (HO2) SOA formation pathways from isoprene at a forested site in California. In contrast to IEPOX, the calculated production rate of MAE was observed to be independent of temperature. This is the result of the very fast thermolysis of MPAN at high temperatures that affects the distribution of the MPAN reservoir (MPAN / MPA radical) reducing the fraction that can react with OH to form MAE and subsequently SOA (F(MAE formation)). The strong temperature dependence of F(MAE formation) helps to explain our observations of similar concentrations of IEPOX-derived organosulfates (IEPOX-OS; ~1 ng m(-3)) and MAE-derived organosulfates (MAE-OS; ~1 ng m(-3)) under cooler conditions (lower isoprene concentrations) and much higher IEPOX-OS (~20 ng m(-3)) relative to MAE-OS (<0.0005 ng m(-3)) at higher temperatures (higher isoprene concentrations). A kinetic model of IEPOX and MAE loss showed that MAE forms 10-100 times more ring-opening products than IEPOX and that both are strongly dependent on aerosol water content when aerosol pH is constant. However, the higher fraction of MAE ring opening products does not compensate for the lower MAE production under warmer conditions (higher isoprene concentrations) resulting in lower formation of MAE-derived products relative to IEPOX at the surface. In regions of high NOx, high isoprene emissions and strong vertical mixing the slower MPAN thermolysis rate aloft could increase the fraction of MPAN that forms MAE resulting in a vertically varying isoprene SOA source.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2012

Formation and growth of ultrafine particles from secondary sources in Bakersfield, California

Lars Ahlm; Shang Liu; Douglas A. Day; Lynn M. Russell; R. J. Weber; D. R. Gentner; Allen H. Goldstein; Josh P. DiGangi; S. B. Henry; Frank N. Keutsch; Trevor C. VandenBoer; Milos Z. Markovic; Jennifer G. Murphy; Xinrong Ren; Scott Scheller

carbon (EC) and the AMS tracer C4H9 for hydrocarbon-like organic aerosol (HOA) peaked in the early morning during rush hour, indicative of primary emissions. The fact that the particle number concentration peaked in the afternoon, when EC was at minimum, indicates that the midday increase in number concentration was likely due to new particle formation. The potential importance of solar radiation, the condensation sink of vapor on existing particles, concentrations of OH, O3 ,S O2 ,N H3, and VOCs for both condensational growth and new particle formation is evaluated based on the covariation of these parameters with ultrafine mass. The results suggest that the ultrafine particles are from secondary sources that are co-emitted or co-produced with glyoxal and formaldehyde.


Environmental Pollution | 2012

Ozone deposition to an orange orchard: Partitioning between stomatal and non-stomatal sinks

Silvano Fares; R. J. Weber; Jeong-Hoo Park; D. R. Gentner; John F. Karlik; Allen H. Goldstein

Orange trees are widely cultivated in regions with high concentrations of tropospheric ozone. Citrus absorb ozone through their stomata and emit volatile organic compounds (VOC), which, together with soil emissions of NO, contribute to non-stomatal ozone removal. In a Valencia orange orchard in Exeter, California, we used fast sensors and eddy covariance to characterize water and ozone fluxes. We also measured meteorological parameters necessary to model other important sinks of ozone deposition. We present changes in magnitude of these ozone deposition sinks over the year in response to environmental parameters. Within the plant canopy, the orchard constitutes a sink for ozone, with non-stomatal ozone deposition larger than stomatal uptake. In particular, soil deposition and reactions between ozone, VOC and NO represented the major sinks of ozone. This research aims to help the development of metrics for ozone-risk assessment and advance our understanding of citrus in biosphere-atmosphere exchange.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2013

Insights into Secondary Organic Aerosol Formation Mechanisms from Measured Gas/Particle Partitioning of Specific Organic Tracer Compounds

Yunliang Zhao; Nathan M. Kreisberg; David R. Worton; Gabriel Isaacman; R. J. Weber; Shang Liu; Douglas A. Day; Lynn M. Russell; Milos Z. Markovic; Trevor C. VandenBoer; Jennifer G. Murphy; Susanne V. Hering; Allen H. Goldstein

In situ measurements of organic compounds in both gas and particle phases were made with a thermal desorption aerosol gas chromatography (TAG) instrument. The gas/particle partitioning of phthalic acid, pinonaldehyde, and 6,10,14-trimethyl-2-pentadecanone is discussed in detail to explore secondary organic aerosol (SOA) formation mechanisms. Measured fractions in the particle phase (f(part)) of 6,10,14-trimethyl-2-pentadecanone were similar to those expected from the absorptive gas/particle partitioning theory, suggesting that its partitioning is dominated by absorption processes. However, f(part) of phthalic acid and pinonaldehyde were substantially higher than predicted. The formation of low-volatility products from reactions of phthalic acid with ammonia is proposed as one possible mechanism to explain the high f(part) of phthalic acid. The observations of particle-phase pinonaldehyde when inorganic acids were fully neutralized indicate that inorganic acids are not required for the occurrence of reactive uptake of pinonaldehyde on particles. The observed relationship between f(part) of pinonaldehyde and relative humidity suggests that the aerosol water plays a significant role in the formation of particle-phase pinonaldehyde. Our results clearly show it is necessary to include multiple gas/particle partitioning pathways in models to predict SOA and multiple SOA tracers in source apportionment models to reconstruct SOA.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2015

An Atmospheric Constraint on the NO2 Dependence of Daytime Near-Surface Nitrous Acid (HONO)

S. E. Pusede; Trevor C. VandenBoer; Jennifer G. Murphy; Milos Z. Markovic; Cora J. Young; P. R. Veres; James M. Roberts; Rebecca A. Washenfelder; Steven S. Brown; Xinrong Ren; Catalina Tsai; J. Stutz; William H. Brune; E. C. Browne; P. J. Wooldridge; Ashley R. Graham; R. J. Weber; Allen H. Goldstein; S. Dusanter; Stephen M. Griffith; Philip S. Stevens; Barry Lefer; R. C. Cohen

Recent observations suggest a large and unknown daytime source of nitrous acid (HONO) to the atmosphere. Multiple mechanisms have been proposed, many of which involve chemistry that reduces nitrogen dioxide (NO2) on some time scale. To examine the NO2 dependence of the daytime HONO source, we compare weekday and weekend measurements of NO2 and HONO in two U.S. cities. We find that daytime HONO does not increase proportionally to increases in same-day NO2, i.e., the local NO2 concentration at that time and several hours earlier. We discuss various published HONO formation pathways in the context of this constraint.


Science | 2006

Variability in Nocturnal Nitrogen Oxide Processing and Its Role in Regional Air Quality

Steven S. Brown; T. B. Ryerson; A. G. Wollny; C. A. Brock; Richard E. Peltier; Amy P. Sullivan; R. J. Weber; William P. Dubé; M. Trainer; J. Meagher; F. C. Fehsenfeld; A. R. Ravishankara


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2012

Secondary organic aerosol formation from fossil fuel sources contribute majority of summertime organic mass at Bakersfield

Shang Liu; Lars Ahlm; Douglas A. Day; Lynn M. Russell; Yunliang Zhao; D. R. Gentner; R. J. Weber; Allen H. Goldstein; Mohammed Jaoui; John H. Offenberg; Tadeusz E. Kleindienst; Caitlin L. Rubitschun; Jason D. Surratt; Rebecca J. Sheesley; Scott Scheller


Atmospheric Measurement Techniques | 2011

A relaxed eddy accumulation system for measuring vertical fluxes of nitrous acid

Xinrong Ren; J. E. Sanders; A. Rajendran; R. J. Weber; Allen H. Goldstein; S. E. Pusede; E. C. Browne; K.-E. Min; R. C. Cohen

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Richard E. Peltier

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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F. C. Fehsenfeld

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Carsten Warneke

Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences

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Joost A. de Gouw

Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences

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Lynn M. Russell

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Michael J. Cubison

University of Colorado Boulder

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