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Dive into the research topics where Rolf Häseler is active.

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Featured researches published by Rolf Häseler.


Science | 2014

Missing gas-phase source of hono inferred from zeppelin measurements in the troposphere

Xin Li; Franz Rohrer; Andreas Hofzumahaus; T. Brauers; Rolf Häseler; Birger Bohn; Sebastian Broch; Hendrik Fuchs; Sebastian Gomm; F. Holland; Julia Jäger; Jennifer Kaiser; Frank N. Keutsch; Insa Lohse; Keding Lu; R. Tillmann; Robert Wegener; Glenn M. Wolfe; Thomas F. Mentel; Astrid Kiendler-Scharr; Andreas Wahner

On a Zeppelin Nitrous acid (HONO) is an important atmospheric trace gas that acts as a precursor of tropospheric hydroxyl-radicals (OH), which is responsible for the self-cleansing capacity of the atmosphere and which also controls the concentrations of greenhouse gases, such as methane and ozone. How HONO is made is a mystery. Flying onboard a Zeppelin over the Po Valley in Northern Italy, Li et al. (p. 292) discovered HONO in the undisturbed morning troposphere, indicating that HONO must be produced there, rather than mixed from the surface. The high HONO concentrations are likely to have been formed by a light-dependent gas-phase source that probably consumed OH or HO2 radicals, which hints that the impact of HONO on the abundance of OH in the entire troposphere may be substantially overestimated. The tropospheric production of HONO from a light-dependent gas-phase source raises questions about its impact on OH. Gaseous nitrous acid (HONO) is an important precursor of tropospheric hydroxyl radicals (OH). OH is responsible for atmospheric self-cleansing and controls the concentrations of greenhouse gases like methane and ozone. Due to lack of measurements, vertical distributions of HONO and its sources in the troposphere remain unclear. Here, we present a set of observations of HONO and its budget made onboard a Zeppelin airship. In a sunlit layer separated from Earth’s surface processes by temperature inversion, we found high HONO concentrations providing evidence for a strong gas-phase source of HONO consuming nitrogen oxides and potentially hydrogen oxide radicals. The observed properties of this production process suggest that the generally assumed impact of HONO on the abundance of OH in the troposphere is substantially overestimated.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2014

Parameterization of Thermal Properties of Aging Secondary Organic Aerosol Produced by Photo-Oxidation of Selected Terpene Mixtures

Eva U. Emanuelsson; Thomas F. Mentel; Ågot K. Watne; C. Spindler; Birger Bohn; T. Brauers; Hans-Peter Dorn; Åsa M. Hallquist; Rolf Häseler; Astrid Kiendler-Scharr; K. P. Müller; Håkan Pleijel; Franz Rohrer; Florian Rubach; E. Schlosser; R. Tillmann; Mattias Hallquist

Formation and evolution of secondary organic aerosols (SOA) from biogenic VOCs influences the Earths radiative balance. We have examined the photo-oxidation and aging of boreal terpene mixtures in the SAPHIR simulation chamber. Changes in thermal properties and chemical composition, deduced from mass spectrometric measurements, were providing information on the aging of biogenic SOA produced under ambient solar conditions. Effects of precursor mixture, concentration, and photochemical oxidation levels (OH exposure) were evaluated. OH exposure was found to be the major driver in the long term photochemical transformations, i.e., reaction times of several hours up to days, of SOA and its thermal properties, whereas the initial concentrations and terpenoid mixtures had only minor influence. The volatility distributions were parametrized using a sigmoidal function to determine TVFR0.5 (the temperature yielding a 50% particle volume fraction remaining) and the steepness of the volatility distribution. TVFR0.5 increased by 0.3±0.1% (ca. 1 K), while the steepness increased by 0.9±0.3% per hour of 1×10(6) cm(-3) OH exposure. Thus, aging reduces volatility and increases homogeneity of the vapor pressure distribution, presumably because highly volatile fractions become increasingly susceptible to gas phase oxidation, while less volatile fractions are less reactive with gas phase OH.


Science | 2015

Response to Comment on “Missing gas-phase source of HONO inferred from Zeppelin measurements in the troposphere”

Xin Li; Franz Rohrer; Andreas Hofzumahaus; T. Brauers; Rolf Häseler; Birger Bohn; Sebastian Broch; Hendrik Fuchs; Sebastian Gomm; F. Holland; Julia Jäger; Jennifer Kaiser; Frank N. Keutsch; Insa Lohse; Keding Lu; R. Tillmann; Robert Wegener; Glenn M. Wolfe; Thomas F. Mentel; Astrid Kiendler-Scharr; Andreas Wahner

Ye et al. have determined a maximum nitrous acid (HONO) yield of 3% for the reaction HO2·H2O + NO2, which is much lower than the yield used in our work. This finding, however, does not affect our main result that HONO in the investigated Po Valley region is mainly from a gas-phase source that consumes nitrogen oxides.


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2009

Atmospheric OH reactivities in the Pearl River Delta – China in summer 2006: measurement and model results

Shengrong Lou; F. Holland; Franz Rohrer; Keding Lu; Birger Bohn; T. Brauers; Chih-Chung Chang; Hendrik Fuchs; Rolf Häseler; K. Kita; Y. Kondo; Xin Li; Min Shao; L. M. Zeng; Andreas Wahner; Y. Zhang; W. Wang; Andreas Hofzumahaus


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2011

Observation and modelling of OH and HO 2 concentrations in the Pearl River Delta 2006: a missing OH source in a VOC rich atmosphere

Keding Lu; Franz Rohrer; F. Holland; Hendrik Fuchs; Birger Bohn; T. Brauers; Chih-Chung Chang; Rolf Häseler; Min Hu; K. Kita; Y. Kondo; Xin Li; Shengrong Lou; Sascha Nehr; Min Shao; L. M. Zeng; A. Wahner; Y. Zhang; Andreas Hofzumahaus


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2011

Exploring the atmospheric chemistry of nitrous acid (HONO) at a rural site in Southern China

Xin Li; T. Brauers; Rolf Häseler; Birger Bohn; Hendrik Fuchs; Andreas Hofzumahaus; F. Holland; Shengrong Lou; Keding Lu; Franz Rohrer; Min Hu; L. M. Zeng; Y. Zhang; Rebecca M. Garland; Hang Su; A. Nowak; A. Wiedensohler; N. Takegawa; Min Shao; A. Wahner


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2012

Missing OH source in a suburban environment near Beijing: observed and modelled OH and HO 2 concentrations in summer 2006

Keding Lu; Andreas Hofzumahaus; F. Holland; Birger Bohn; T. Brauers; Hendrik Fuchs; Min Hu; Rolf Häseler; K. Kita; Y. Kondo; Xin Li; Shengrong Lou; A. Oebel; Min Shao; L. M. Zeng; A. Wahner; T. Zhu; Y. Zhang; Franz Rohrer


Nature Geoscience | 2013

Experimental evidence for efficient hydroxyl radical regeneration in isoprene oxidation

Hendrik Fuchs; Andreas Hofzumahaus; Franz Rohrer; Birger Bohn; T. Brauers; H-P. Dorn; Rolf Häseler; F. Holland; Martin Kaminski; Xin Li; Keding Lu; Sascha Nehr; R. Tillmann; Robert Wegener; A. Wahner


Nature Geoscience | 2014

Maximum efficiency in the hydroxyl-radical-based self-cleansing of the troposphere

Franz Rohrer; Keding Lu; Andreas Hofzumahaus; Birger Bohn; T. Brauers; Chih-Chung Chang; Hendrik Fuchs; Rolf Häseler; F. Holland; Min Hu; Kazuyuki Kita; Yutaka Kondo; Xin Li; Shengrong Lou; Andreas Oebel; Min Shao; Limin Zeng; Tong Zhu; Yuanhang Zhang; Andreas Wahner


Journal of Atmospheric Chemistry | 2007

Intercomparison of Two Hydroxyl Radical Measurement Techniques at the Atmosphere Simulation Chamber SAPHIR

E. Schlosser; Birger Bohn; T. Brauers; Hans-Peter Dorn; Hendrik Fuchs; Rolf Häseler; Andreas Hofzumahaus; F. Holland; Franz Rohrer; L. Rupp; Manfred Siese; R. Tillmann; Andreas Wahner

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Franz Rohrer

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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Birger Bohn

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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Hendrik Fuchs

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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F. Holland

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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T. Brauers

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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Andreas Wahner

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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R. Tillmann

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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Robert Wegener

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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