Photo-tautomerization of acetaldehyde as a photochemical source of formic acid in the troposphere

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Abstract

Organic acids play a key role in the troposphere, contributing to atmospheric aqueous-phase chemistry, aerosol formation, and precipitation acidity. Atmospheric models currently account for less than half the observed, globally averaged formic acid loading. Here we report that acetaldehyde photo-tautomerizes to vinyl alcohol under atmospherically relevant pressures of nitrogen, in the actinic wavelength range, λ = 300-330 nm, with measured quantum yields of 2-25%. Recent theoretical kinetics studies show hydroxyl-initiated oxidation of vinyl alcohol produces formic acid. Adding these pathways to an atmospheric chemistry box model (Master Chemical Mechanism) demonstrates increased formic acid concentrations by a factor of ∼1.7 in the polluted troposphere and a factor of ∼3 under pristine conditions. Incorporating this mechanism into the GEOS-Chem 3D global chemical transport model reveals an estimated 7% contribution to worldwide formic acid production, with up to 60% of the total modeled formic acid production over oceans arising from photo-tautomerization.

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Shaw, M. F., Sztáray, B., Whalley, L. K., Heard, D. E., Millet, D. B., Jordan, M. J. T., … Kable, S. H. (2018). Photo-tautomerization of acetaldehyde as a photochemical source of formic acid in the troposphere. Nature Communications, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-04824-2

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