Published in

Nature Research, Nature Chemistry, 1(15), p. 129-135, 2022

DOI: 10.1038/s41557-022-01067-z

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The gas-phase formation mechanism of iodic acid as an atmospheric aerosol source

Journal article published in 2022 by Henning Finkenzeller ORCID, Siddharth Iyer ORCID, Xu-Cheng He ORCID, Mario Simon, Theodore K. Koenig ORCID, Christopher F. Lee, Rashid Valiev ORCID, Victoria Hofbauer, Antonio Amorim, Rima Baalbaki ORCID, Andrea Baccarini ORCID, Lisa Beck ORCID, David M. Bell, Lucía Caudillo, Dexian Chen and other authors.
This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.
This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.

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Abstract

AbstractIodine is a reactive trace element in atmospheric chemistry that destroys ozone and nucleates particles. Iodine emissions have tripled since 1950 and are projected to keep increasing with rising O3 surface concentrations. Although iodic acid (HIO3) is widespread and forms particles more efficiently than sulfuric acid, its gas-phase formation mechanism remains unresolved. Here, in CLOUD atmospheric simulation chamber experiments that generate iodine radicals at atmospherically relevant rates, we show that iodooxy hypoiodite, IOIO, is efficiently converted into HIO3 via reactions (R1) IOIO + O3 → IOIO4 and (R2) IOIO4 + H2O → HIO3 + HOI + (1)O2. The laboratory-derived reaction rate coefficients are corroborated by theory and shown to explain field observations of daytime HIO3 in the remote lower free troposphere. The mechanism provides a missing link between iodine sources and particle formation. Because particulate iodate is readily reduced, recycling iodine back into the gas phase, our results suggest a catalytic role of iodine in aerosol formation.