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Dive into the research topics where Taina Yli-Juuti is active.

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Featured researches published by Taina Yli-Juuti.


Nature | 2013

Molecular understanding of sulphuric acid–amine particle nucleation in the atmosphere

Joao Almeida; Siegfried Schobesberger; Andreas Kürten; Ismael K. Ortega; Oona Kupiainen-Määttä; Arnaud P. Praplan; Alexey Adamov; A. Amorim; Federico Bianchi; Martin Breitenlechner; A. David; Josef Dommen; Neil M. Donahue; Andrew J. Downard; Eimear M. Dunne; Jonathan Duplissy; Sebastian Ehrhart; Alessandro Franchin; R. Guida; Jani Hakala; Armin Hansel; Martin Heinritzi; Henning Henschel; Tuija Jokinen; Heikki Junninen; Maija K. Kajos; Juha Kangasluoma; Helmi Keskinen; Agnieszka Kupc; Theo Kurtén

Nucleation of aerosol particles from trace atmospheric vapours is thought to provide up to half of global cloud condensation nuclei. Aerosols can cause a net cooling of climate by scattering sunlight and by leading to smaller but more numerous cloud droplets, which makes clouds brighter and extends their lifetimes. Atmospheric aerosols derived from human activities are thought to have compensated for a large fraction of the warming caused by greenhouse gases. However, despite its importance for climate, atmospheric nucleation is poorly understood. Recently, it has been shown that sulphuric acid and ammonia cannot explain particle formation rates observed in the lower atmosphere. It is thought that amines may enhance nucleation, but until now there has been no direct evidence for amine ternary nucleation under atmospheric conditions. Here we use the CLOUD (Cosmics Leaving OUtdoor Droplets) chamber at CERN and find that dimethylamine above three parts per trillion by volume can enhance particle formation rates more than 1,000-fold compared with ammonia, sufficient to account for the particle formation rates observed in the atmosphere. Molecular analysis of the clusters reveals that the faster nucleation is explained by a base-stabilization mechanism involving acid–amine pairs, which strongly decrease evaporation. The ion-induced contribution is generally small, reflecting the high stability of sulphuric acid–dimethylamine clusters and indicating that galactic cosmic rays exert only a small influence on their formation, except at low overall formation rates. Our experimental measurements are well reproduced by a dynamical model based on quantum chemical calculations of binding energies of molecular clusters, without any fitted parameters. These results show that, in regions of the atmosphere near amine sources, both amines and sulphur dioxide should be considered when assessing the impact of anthropogenic activities on particle formation.


Chemical Reviews | 2015

Saturation Vapor Pressures and Transition Enthalpies of Low-Volatility Organic Molecules of Atmospheric Relevance: From Dicarboxylic Acids to Complex Mixtures

Merete Bilde; Kelley C. Barsanti; Murray Booth; Christopher D. Cappa; Neil M. Donahue; Eva U. Emanuelsson; Gordon McFiggans; Ulrich K. Krieger; Claudia Marcolli; David Topping; Paul J. Ziemann; Mark H. Barley; Simon L. Clegg; Benjamin J. Dennis-Smither; Mattias Hallquist; Åsa M. Hallquist; Andrey Khlystov; Markku Kulmala; D. Mogensen; Carl J. Percival; Francis D. Pope; Jonathan P. Reid; M. A. V. Ribeiro da Silva; Thomas Rosenoern; Kent Salo; V. Soonsin; Taina Yli-Juuti; N. L. Prisle; Joakim Pagels; Juergen Rarey

There are a number of techniques that can be used that differ in terms of whether they fundamentally probe the equilibrium and the temperature range over which they can be applied. The series of homologous, straight-chain dicarboxylic acids have received much attention over the past decade given their atmospheric relevance, commercial availability, and low saturation vapor pressures, thus making them ideal test compounds. Uncertainties in the solid-state saturation vapor pressures obtained from individual methodologies are typically on the order of 50-100%, but the differences between saturation vapor pressures obtained with different methods are approximately 1-4 orders of magnitude, with the spread tending to increase as the saturation vapor pressure decreases. Some of the dicarboxylic acids can exist with multiple solid-state structures that have distinct saturation vapor pressures. Furthermore, the samples on which measurements are performed may actually exist as amorphous subcooled liquids rather than solid crystalline compounds, again with consequences for the measured saturation vapor pressures, since the subcooled liquid phase will have a higher saturation vapor pressure than the crystalline solid phase. Compounds with equilibrium vapor pressures in this range will exhibit the greatest sensitivities in terms of their gas to particle partitioning to uncertainties in their saturation vapor pressures, with consequent impacts on the ability of explicit and semiexplicit chemical models to simulate secondary organic aerosol formation.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2014

Hydration of atmospherically relevant molecular clusters: computational chemistry and classical thermodynamics.

Henning Henschel; Juan C. Acosta Navarro; Taina Yli-Juuti; Oona Kupiainen-Määttä; Tinja Olenius; Ismael K. Ortega; Simon L. Clegg; Theo Kurtén; Ilona Riipinen; Hanna Vehkamäki

Formation of new particles through clustering of molecules from condensable vapors is a significant source for atmospheric aerosols. The smallest clusters formed in the very first steps of the condensation process are, however, not directly observable by experimental means. We present here a comprehensive series of electronic structure calculations on the hydrates of clusters formed by up to four molecules of sulfuric acid, and up to two molecules of ammonia or dimethylamine. Though clusters containing ammonia, and certainly dimethylamine, generally exhibit lower average hydration than the pure acid clusters, populations of individual hydrates vary widely. Furthermore, we explore the predictions obtained using a thermodynamic model for the description of these hydrates. The similar magnitude and trends of hydrate formation predicted by both methods illustrate the potential of combining them to obtain more comprehensive models. The stabilization of some clusters relative to others due to their hydration is highly likely to have significant effects on the overall processes that lead to formation of new particles in the atmosphere.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2013

Volatility of Organic Aerosol: Evaporation of Ammonium Sulfate/Succinic Acid Aqueous Solution Droplets

Taina Yli-Juuti; Alessandro A. Zardini; Axel Eriksson; A. M. K. Hansen; Joakim Pagels; Erik Swietlicki; Birgitta Svenningsson; Marianne Glasius; Douglas R. Worsnop; Ilona Riipinen; Merete Bilde

Condensation and evaporation modify the properties and effects of atmospheric aerosol particles. We studied the evaporation of aqueous succinic acid and succinic acid/ammonium sulfate droplets to obtain insights on the effect of ammonium sulfate on the gas/particle partitioning of atmospheric organic acids. Droplet evaporation in a laminar flow tube was measured in a Tandem Differential Mobility Analyzer setup. A wide range of droplet compositions was investigated, and for some of the experiments the composition was tracked using an Aerosol Mass Spectrometer. The measured evaporation was compared to model predictions where the ammonium sulfate was assumed not to directly affect succinic acid evaporation. The model captured the evaporation rates for droplets with large organic content but overestimated the droplet size change when the molar concentration of succinic acid was similar to or lower than that of ammonium sulfate, suggesting that ammonium sulfate enhances the partitioning of dicarboxylic acids to aqueous particles more than currently expected from simple mixture thermodynamics. If extrapolated to the real atmosphere, these results imply enhanced partitioning of secondary organic compounds to particulate phase in environments dominated by inorganic aerosol.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2017

Factors controlling the evaporation of secondary organic aerosol from α‐pinene ozonolysis

Taina Yli-Juuti; Aki Pajunoja; Olli-Pekka Tikkanen; Angela Buchholz; C. L. Faiola; Olli Väisänen; Liqing Hao; Eetu Kari; Otso Peräkylä; Olga Garmash; Manabu Shiraiwa; Mikael Ehn; K. E. J. Lehtinen; Annele Virtanen

Abstract Secondary organic aerosols (SOA) forms a major fraction of organic aerosols in the atmosphere. Knowledge of SOA properties that affect their dynamics in the atmosphere is needed for improving climate models. By combining experimental and modeling techniques, we investigated the factors controlling SOA evaporation under different humidity conditions. Our experiments support the conclusion of particle phase diffusivity limiting the evaporation under dry conditions. Viscosity of particles at dry conditions was estimated to increase several orders of magnitude during evaporation, up to 109 Pa s. However, at atmospherically relevant relative humidity and time scales, our results show that diffusion limitations may have a minor effect on evaporation of the studied α‐pinene SOA particles. Based on previous studies and our model simulations, we suggest that, in warm environments dominated by biogenic emissions, the major uncertainty in models describing the SOA particle evaporation is related to the volatility of SOA constituents.


Archive | 2017

Ambient observations of dimers from terpene oxidation in the gas phase

Claudia Mohr; Felipe D. Lopez-Hilfiker; Taina Yli-Juuti; Arto Heitto; Anna Lutz; Mattias Hallquist; Emma L. D'Ambro; Matti P. Rissanen; Liqing Hao; Siegfried Schobesberger; Markku Kulmala; Roy L. Mauldin; Ulla Makkonen; Mikko Sipilä; Tuukka Petäjä; Joel A. Thornton

We present ambient observations of dimeric monoterpene oxidation products (C16–20HyO6–9) in gas and particle phases in the boreal forest in Finland in spring 2013 and 2014, detected with a chemical ionization mass spectrometer with a filter inlet for gases and aerosols employing acetate and iodide as reagent ions. These are among the first online dual-phase observations of such dimers in the atmosphere. Estimated saturation concentrations of 10−15 to 10−6 µg m−3 (based on observed thermal desorptions and group-contribution methods) and measured gas-phase concentrations of 10−3 to 10−2 µg m−3 (~106–107 molecules cm−3) corroborate a gas-phase formation mechanism. Regular new particle formation (NPF) events allowed insights into the potential role dimers may play for atmospheric NPF and growth. The observationally constrained Model for Acid-Base chemistry in NAnoparticle Growth indicates a contribution of ~5% to early stage particle growth from the ~60 gaseous dimer compounds.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2017

Ambient observations of dimers from terpene oxidation in the gas phase: Implications for new particle formation and growth: Ambient Observations of Gas-Phase Dimers

Claudia Mohr; Felipe D. Lopez-Hilfiker; Taina Yli-Juuti; Arto Heitto; Anna Lutz; Mattias Hallquist; Emma L. D'Ambro; Matti P. Rissanen; Liqing Hao; Siegfried Schobesberger; Markku Kulmala; Roy L. Mauldin; Ulla Makkonen; Mikko Sipilä; Tuukka Petäjä; Joel A. Thornton

We present ambient observations of dimeric monoterpene oxidation products (C16–20HyO6–9) in gas and particle phases in the boreal forest in Finland in spring 2013 and 2014, detected with a chemical ionization mass spectrometer with a filter inlet for gases and aerosols employing acetate and iodide as reagent ions. These are among the first online dual-phase observations of such dimers in the atmosphere. Estimated saturation concentrations of 10−15 to 10−6 µg m−3 (based on observed thermal desorptions and group-contribution methods) and measured gas-phase concentrations of 10−3 to 10−2 µg m−3 (~106–107 molecules cm−3) corroborate a gas-phase formation mechanism. Regular new particle formation (NPF) events allowed insights into the potential role dimers may play for atmospheric NPF and growth. The observationally constrained Model for Acid-Base chemistry in NAnoparticle Growth indicates a contribution of ~5% to early stage particle growth from the ~60 gaseous dimer compounds.


Aerosol Science and Technology | 2016

Modeling the thermodynamics and kinetics of sulfuric acid-dimethylamine-water nanoparticle growth in the CLOUD chamber

Lars Ahlm; Taina Yli-Juuti; Siegfried Schobesberger; Arnaud P. Praplan; Jaeseok Kim; Olli-Pekka Tikkanen; Michael J. Lawler; James N. Smith; Jasmin Tröstl; J. C. Acosta Navarro; Urs Baltensperger; Federico Bianchi; Neil M. Donahue; Jonathan Duplissy; Alessandro Franchin; Tuija Jokinen; Helmi Keskinen; J. Kirkby; Andreas Kürten; Ari Laaksonen; K. Lehtipalo; Tuukka Petäjä; Francesco Riccobono; Matti P. Rissanen; Linda Rondo; Simon Schallhart; Mario Simon; Paul M. Winkler; D. R. Worsnop; Annele Virtanen

ABSTRACT Dimethylamine (DMA) has a stabilizing effect on sulfuric acid (SA) clusters, and the SA and DMA molecules and clusters likely play important roles in both aerosol particle formation and growth in the atmosphere. We use the monodisperse particle growth model for acid-base chemistry in nanoparticle growth (MABNAG) together with direct and indirect observations from the CLOUD4 and CLOUD7 experiments in the cosmics leaving outdoor droplets (CLOUD) chamber at CERN to investigate the size and composition evolution of freshly formed particles consisting of SA, DMA, and water as they grow to 20 nm in dry diameter. Hygroscopic growth factors are measured using a nano-hygroscopicity tandem differential mobility analyzer (nano-HTDMA), which combined with simulations of particle water uptake using the thermodynamic extended-aerosol inorganics model (E-AIM) constrain the chemical composition. MABNAG predicts a particle-phase ratio between DMA and SA molecules of 1.1–1.3 for a 2 nm particle and DMA gas-phase mixing ratios between 3.5 and 80 pptv. These ratios agree well with observations by an atmospheric-pressure interface time-of-flight (APi-TOF) mass spectrometer. Simulations with MABNAG, direct observations of the composition of clusters <2 nm, and indirect observations of the particle composition indicate that the acidity of the nucleated particles decreases as they grow from ∼1 to 20 nm. However, MABNAG predicts less acidic particles than suggested by the indirect estimates at 10 nm diameter using the nano-HTDMA measurements, and less acidic particles than observed by a thermal desorption chemical ionization mass spectrometer (TDCIMS) at 10–30 nm. Possible explanations for these discrepancies are discussed. Copyright


Aerosol Science and Technology | 2018

Hygroscopicity of dimethylaminium-, sulfate-, and ammonium-containing nanoparticles

Olli-Pekka Tikkanen; Olli Väisänen; Liqing Hao; Eemeli Holopainen; Hao Wang; K. E. J. Lehtinen; Annele Virtanen; Taina Yli-Juuti

Abstract Dimethylamine (DMA) and sulfuric acid (SA) are the important constituents of atmospheric aerosols. To accurately predict the behavior of DMA-containing aerosol systems, exact thermodynamic models are needed. The applicability of these models needs to be tested carefully in different experimental settings to continuously validate and improve their performance. In this work, the Extended Aerosol Inorganics Model (E-AIM) was used to simulate the hygroscopicity of aerosol particles generated from five different aqueous DMA-SA solutions. The applicability of the model was tested in the 10–200 nm size range and from DMA-SA molar ratios ranging from 1:3 to 2:1. The aerosol hygroscopic growth at 0–80% RH was determined with two tandem differential mobility analyzers, and the composition of the generated particles was measured with the Aerosol Mass Spectrometer (AMS), which revealed that the particles contained also ammonium. The model accurately captured the hygroscopicity for particles larger than 80 nm. With particles smaller than 80 nm, the model underestimated the hygroscopicity in all the studied experimental conditions. An increase in hygroscopicity parameter κ with decreasing particle size implied a plausible base evaporation in the experimental setup, which in turn may have affected the modeled hygroscopicity as the composition of the smallest particles may have differed from the AMS measurements. Coupling E-AIM to a dynamic evaporation model, however, could not produce compositions whose modeled hygroscopic behavior would match the measured hygroscopic growth at smaller sizes. Our results, therefore, suggest that DMA thermodynamics are not modeled correctly in E-AIM or there exists uncertainty in the physicochemical parameters.


19th International Conference on Nucleation and Atmospheric Aerosols (ICNAA), JUN 23-28, 2013, Fort Collins, CO | 2013

Evolution of nanoparticle composition in CLOUD in presence of sulphuric acid, ammonia and organics

Helmi Keskinen; Annele Virtanen; Jorma Joutsensaari; Georgios Tsagkogeorgas; Jonathan Duplissy; Siegfried Schobesberger; M. Gysel; Francesco Riccobono; Jay G. Slowik; F. Bianchi; Taina Yli-Juuti; K. Lehtipalo; L. Rondo; Martin Breitenlechner; Agnieszka Kupc; J. Almeida; A. Amorim; Eimear M. Dunne; Andrew J. Downard; Sebastian Ehrhart; Alessandro Franchin; Maija K. Kajos; J. Kirkby; Andreas Kürten; Tuomo Nieminen; Vladimir Makhmutov; S. Mathot; Pasi Miettinen; Antti Onnela; Tuukka Petäjä

In this study, we investigate the composition of nucleated nanoparticles formed from sulphuric acid, ammonia, amines, and oxidised organics in the CLOUD chamber experiments at CERN. The investigation is carried out via analysis of the particle hygroscopicity (size range of 15-63 nm), ethanol affinity (15-50nm), oxidation state (<50 nm), and ion composition (few nanometers). The organic volume fraction of particles increased with an increase in particle diameter in presence of the sulphuric acid, ammonia and organics. Vice versa, the sulphuric acid volume fraction decreased when the particle diameter increased. The results provide information on the size-dependent composition of nucleated aerosol particles.

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Markku Kulmala

Finnish Meteorological Institute

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Mikael Ehn

University of Helsinki

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Neil M. Donahue

Carnegie Mellon University

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Annele Virtanen

University of Eastern Finland

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