Stéphanie Rossignol
University of Lyon
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Featured researches published by Stéphanie Rossignol.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2014
Stéphanie Rossignol; Kifle Z. Aregahegn; Liselotte Tinel; Ludovic Fine; Barbara Nozière; Christian George
In recent years, it has been proposed that gas phase glyoxal could significantly contribute to ambient organic aerosol (OA) mass through multiphase chemistry. Of particular interest is the reaction between glyoxal and ammonium cations producing light-absorbing compounds such as imidazole derivatives. It was recently shown that imidazole-2-carboxaldehyde (IC) can act as a photosensitizer, initiating aerosol growth in the presence of gaseous volatile organic compounds. Given the potential importance of this new photosensitized growth pathway for ambient OA, the related reaction mechanism was investigated at a molecular level. Bulk and flow tube experiments were performed to identify major products of the reaction of limonene with the triplet state of IC by direct (±)ESI-HRMS and UPLC/(±)HESI-HRMS analysis. Detection of recombination products of IC with limonene or with itself, in bulk and flow tube experiments, showed that IC is able to initiate a radical chemistry in the aerosol phase under realistic irradiation conditions. Furthermore, highly oxygenated limonene reaction products were detected, clearly explaining the observed OA growth. The chemistry of peroxy radicals derived from limonene upon addition of oxygen explains the formation of such low-volatile compounds without any traditional gas phase oxidant.
Science | 2016
Stéphanie Rossignol; Liselotte Tinel; Angelica Bianco; Monica Passananti; Marcello Brigante; D. James Donaldson; Christian George
Active fatty acid layers Saturated fatty acids are considered to be inert, but they can be surprisingly reactive when present as a coating at an air-water interface. Rossignol et al. show that nonanoic acid is photochemically active when it is present as a monolayer on a water surface (see the Perspective by Vaida). Fatty acids are ubiquitous in the environment, and their photochemical processing could have a substantial impact on local ozone and particle formation. Science, this issue p. 699; see also p. 650 Fatty acids display a rich photochemistry as a monolayer on aqueous surfaces and may affect ozone formation. Although fatty acids are believed to be photochemically inert in the actinic region, complex volatile organic compounds are produced during illumination of an air-water interface coated solely with a monolayer of carboxylic acid. When aqueous solutions containing nonanoic acid (NA) at bulk concentrations that give rise to just over a monolayer of NA coverage are illuminated with actinic radiation, saturated and unsaturated aldehydes are seen in the gas phase, and more highly oxygenated products appear in the aqueous phase. This chemistry is probably initiated by triplet-state NA molecules excited by direct absorption of actinic light at the water surface. Because fatty acids–covered interfaces are ubiquitous in the environment, such photochemical processing will have a substantial impact on local ozone and particle formation.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015
Hongbo Fu; Raluca Ciuraru; Yoan Dupart; Monica Passananti; Liselotte Tinel; Stéphanie Rossignol; Sébastien Perrier; D. James Donaldson; Jianmin Chen; Christian George
We report on experiments that probe photosensitized chemistry at the air/water interface, a region that does not just connect the two phases but displays its own specific chemistry. Here, we follow reactions of octanol, a proxy for environmentally relevant soluble surfactants, initiated by an attack by triplet-state carbonyl compounds, which are themselves concentrated at the interface by the presence of this surfactant. Gas-phase products are determined using PTR-ToF-MS, and those remaining in the organic layer are determined by ATR-FTIR spectroscopy and HPLC-HRMS. We observe the photosensitized production of carboxylic acids as well as unsaturated and branched-chain oxygenated products, compounds that act as organic aerosol precursors and had been thought to be produced solely by biological activity. A mechanism that is consistent with the observations is detailed here, and the energetics of several key reactions are calculated using quantum chemical methods. The results suggest that the concentrating nature of the interface leads to its being a favorable venue for radical reactions yielding complex and functionalized products that themselves could initiate further secondary chemistry and new particle formation in the atmospheric environment.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2016
Liselotte Tinel; Stéphanie Rossignol; Angelica Bianco; Monica Passananti; Sébastien Perrier; Xinming Wang; Marcello Brigante; D. James Donaldson; Christian George
Interfaces are ubiquitous in the environment and many atmospheric key processes, such as gas deposition, aerosol, and cloud formation are, at one stage or another, strongly impacted by physical and chemical processes occurring at interfaces. Here, the photoinduced chemistry of an air/water interface coated with nonanoic acid—a fatty acid surfactant we use as a proxy for chemically complex natural aqueous surface microlayers—was investigated as a source of volatile and semivolatile reactive organic species. The carboxylic acid coating significantly increased the propensity of photosensitizers, chosen to mimic those observed in real environmental waters, to partition to the interface and enhance reactivity there. Photochemical formation of functionalized and unsaturated compounds was systematically observed upon irradiation of these coated surfaces. The role of a coated interface appears to be critical in providing a concentrated medium allowing radical–radical reactions to occur in parallel with molecular oxygen additions. Mechanistic insights are provided from extensive analysis of products observed in both gas and aqueous phases by online switchable reagent ion-time of flight-mass spectrometry and by off-line ultraperformance liquid chromatography coupled to a Q Exactive high resolution mass spectrometer through heated electrospray ionization, respectively.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Peter A. Alpert; Raluca Ciuraru; Stéphanie Rossignol; Monica Passananti; Liselotte Tinel; Sébastien Perrier; Yoan Dupart; Sarah S. Steimer; Markus Ammann; D. James Donaldson; Christian George
Organic interfaces that exist at the sea surface microlayer or as surfactant coatings on cloud droplets are highly concentrated and chemically distinct from the underlying bulk or overlying gas phase. Therefore, they may be potentially unique locations for chemical or photochemical reactions. Recently, photochemical production of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) was reported at a nonanoic acid interface however, subsequent secondary organic aerosol (SOA) particle production was incapable of being observed. We investigated SOA particle formation due to photochemical reactions occurring at an air-water interface in presence of model saturated long chain fatty acid and alcohol surfactants, nonanoic acid and nonanol, respectively. Ozonolysis of the gas phase photochemical products in the dark or under continued UV irradiation both resulted in nucleation and growth of SOA particles. Irradiation of nonanol did not yield detectable VOC or SOA production. Organic carbon functionalities of the SOA were probed using X-ray microspectroscopy and compared with other laboratory generated and field collected particles. Carbon-carbon double bonds were identified in the condensed phase which survived ozonolysis during new particle formation and growth. The implications of photochemical processes occurring at organic coated surfaces are discussed in the context of marine SOA particle atmospheric fluxes.
Microscopy and Microanalysis | 2018
Peter A. Alpert; Pablo Corral Arroyo; Jing Dou; Ulrich K. Krieger; Sarah S. Steimer; Jan-David Förster; Florian Ditas; Christopher Pöhlker; Stéphanie Rossignol; Monica Passananti; Sebastian Perrier; Christian George; Thomas Berkemeier; Manabu Shiraiwa; Markus Ammann
1. Laboratory of Environmental Chemistry, Paul Scherrer Institute, 5232 Villigen, Switzerland. 2. Institute for Atmospheric and Climate Science, ETH Zürich, 8092 Zürich, Switzerland 3. Department of Chemistry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, CB2 1EW, United Kingdom 4. Multiphase Chemistry Department, Max Planck Institute for Chemistry, 55128 Mainz, Germany 5. Aix Marseille Université, CNRS, LCE UMR 7376, 13331 Marseille, France 6. Department of Physics, University of Helsinki, 00014 Helsinki, Finland 7. Université Lyon 1, CNRS, UMR 5256, IRCELYON, 69626 Villeurbanne, France 8. School of Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA 30332, United States 9. Department of Chemistry, University of California, Irvine, CA 92617, United States
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2016
Xin Ke Wang; Stéphanie Rossignol; Ye Ma; Lei Yao; Ming Yi Wang; Jianmin Chen; Christian George; Lin Wang
Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology A-chemistry | 2016
H. Mechakra; T. Sehili; M.A. Kribeche; A.A. Ayachi; Stéphanie Rossignol; Christian George
Environmental Science and Technology Letters | 2016
Jing Shang; Monica Passananti; Yoan Dupart; Raluca Ciuraru; Liselotte Tinel; Stéphanie Rossignol; Sébastien Perrier; Tong Zhu; Christian George
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2016
Liselotte Tinel; Stéphanie Rossignol; R. Ciuraru; Stephane Dumas; Christian George