A team of researchers at the Fritz Haber Institute of the Max Planck Society in Berlin, the Qatar Environment and Energy Research Institute/Hamad Bin Khalifa University, the synchrotron sources PETRA III in Hamburg and SOLEIL in Gif-sur-Yvette, the Sorbonne University in Paris, the ETH Zurich, and the PSI Center for Energy and Environmental Science have made a groundbreaking discovery in understanding how air pollution forms at the molecular level. Their investigation, published in the journal Nature Communications, sheds light on the complex chemical processes occurring at the boundary between liquids, in particular aqueous solutions, and vapor in our atmosphere.
The international study focuses on the differences of complex acid-base equilibria (i.e., the ratio between basic and acidic components) inside the bulk of a solution on one hand, and at the very interface between the solution and the surrounding vapor on the other. While it is straightforward to measure acid-base equilibria in the bulk of a solution using state-of-the art methods, determining these equilibria at the boundary between a solution and the surrounding gas phase is challenging. Even though this boundary layer is about one hundred thousand times narrower than a human hair, it plays a very important role in processes that influence air pollution and climate change. Examining the chemistry of the solution-vapor boundary on a molecular scale thus helps to develop improved models for our understanding of the fate of aerosols in the atmosphere and their influence on the global climate.
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Image: Combined spectroscopy and atomistic simulations provide an improved understanding of specific molecular-level processes governing air pollution formation (Credit: FHI/MPG. The cloudy background of the image is taken from NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, repository image s3v-1280 (https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/11685/)).
