Product studies of gas-phase reactions of organic compounds. Atkinson, R. Pure and Applied Chemistry, 70(7):1327-1334, 1998.
abstract   bibtex   
Large quantities of volatile non-methane organic compounds (NMOCs) are emitted into the atmosphere from anthropogenic and biogenic sources. In the troposphere, these NMOCs can undergo photolysis, reaction with the hydroxyl (OH) radical, reaction with the nitrate (NO3) radical, and reaction with ozone (O-3) While the kinetics of the initial OH radical, NO3 radical and O-3 reactions are reasonably well known or can often be estimated with some degree of reliability, the subsequent reaction mechanisms and the products formed under tropospheric conditions are generally much less well understood. The various methods of generation of OH radicals, NO3 radicals and O-3 for laboratory product studies, together with methods of analysis and potential complications due to other reactions, are discussed.
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 title = {Product studies of gas-phase reactions of organic compounds},
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 year = {1998},
 pages = {1327-1334},
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 abstract = {Large quantities of volatile non-methane organic compounds (NMOCs) are emitted into the atmosphere from anthropogenic and biogenic sources. In the troposphere, these NMOCs can undergo photolysis, reaction with the hydroxyl (OH) radical, reaction with the nitrate (NO3) radical, and reaction with ozone (O-3) While the kinetics of the initial OH radical, NO3 radical and O-3 reactions are reasonably well known or can often be estimated with some degree of reliability, the subsequent reaction mechanisms and the products formed under tropospheric conditions are generally much less well understood. The various methods of generation of OH radicals, NO3 radicals and O-3 for laboratory product studies, together with methods of analysis and potential complications due to other reactions, are discussed.},
 bibtype = {article},
 author = {Atkinson, R},
 journal = {Pure and Applied Chemistry},
 number = {7}
}

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