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Criegee chemistry captured

FEB 09, 2012
An elusive but atmospherically important molecule yields to kinetic measurement for the first time.
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The chemistry of the atmosphere is complicated. Multitudes of chemical species undergo thousands of reactions, each with its own kinetic rate constant that must be known if the system is to be modeled. Among the key players in atmospheric systems is a class of unstable molecules called Criegee intermediates (CIs), the simplest of which is shown in the figure. Qualitative evidence for CIs’ atmospheric role is strong, but until recently, no one had ever detected a gas-phase CI directly, let alone measured its rates of reaction with other molecules. Atmospheric models have had to rely on indirect estimates of those rates. Now, Craig Taatjes and David Osborn (both at Sandia National Laboratories in Livermore, California) and their colleagues have performed direct kinetic measurements on the reactions between the simplest CI and four small atmospheric molecules: SO2, NO, NO2, and water. The key to their success was in how they made the CI: After much trial and error, they found that by reacting CH2I with O2, they formed the CI without too much excess energy or too many unwanted byproducts. For three of the four reactions they studied, they found rates that differed by orders of magnitude from previous estimates. The reactions with SO2 and NO2 were much faster than expected, and the reaction with NO was much slower—in fact, too slow for them to measure. (O. Welz et al., Science 335, 204, 2012 .)—Johanna Miller

More about the authors

Johanna L. Miller, jmiller@aip.org

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