Unveiling an Unexpected Branching Point in α-pinene Ozonolysis via Molecular Dynamics Guided Reaction Discovery

01 July 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Secondary organic aerosols (SOAs) significantly impact Earth’s climate and human health. Although the oxidation of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) has been recognized as the major contributor to the atmospheric SOA budget, the mechanisms by which this process produces SOA-forming highly oxygenated organic molecules (HOMs) remain unclear. A major challenge is navigating the complex chemical landscape of these transformations, which traditional hypothesis-driven methods fail to thoroughly investigate. Here, we explored the oxidation of α-pinene, a critical atmospheric biogenic VOC, using a novel reaction discovery approach based on ab initio molecular dynamics and state-of-the-art enhanced sampling techniques. Our approach successfully identified all established reaction pathways of α-pinene ozonolysis, as well as discovered multiple novel species and pathways without relying on a priori chemical knowledge. In particular, we unveiled an unexpected branching point that leads to the rapid formation of alkoxy radicals, whose high and diverse reactivity help to explain hitherto unexplained oxidation pathways suggested by mass spectral peaks observed in α-pinene ozonolysis experiments. This branching point is likely prevalent across a variety of atmospheric VOCs and could be crucial in establishing the missing link to SOA-forming HOMs.

Keywords

volatile organic compounds
highly oxygenated organic molecules
reaction discovery
molecular dynamics
atmospheric chemical mechanisms

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