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DOI: 10.1002/2016rg000540
¤ OpenAccess: Bronze
This work has “Bronze” OA status. This means it is free to read on the publisher landing page, but without any identifiable license.

Recent advances in understanding secondary organic aerosol: Implications for global climate forcing

Manish Shrivastava,Christopher D. Cappa,Jiwen Fan,Allen H. Goldstein,Alex Guenther,José L. Jimenez,Chongai Kuang,Alexander Laskin,Scot T. Martin,N. L. Ng,Tuukka Petäj̈ä,Jeffrey R. Pierce,Philip J. Rasch,Pontus Roldin,John H. Seinfeld,John E. Shilling,James N. Smith,Joel A. Thornton,Rainer Volkamer,Jian Wang,Douglas R. Worsnop,Rahul A. Zaveri,Alla Zelenyuk,Qi Zhang

Aerosol
Radiative forcing
Environmental science
2017
Abstract Anthropogenic emissions and land use changes have modified atmospheric aerosol concentrations and size distributions over time. Understanding preindustrial conditions and changes in organic aerosol due to anthropogenic activities is important because these features (1) influence estimates of aerosol radiative forcing and (2) can confound estimates of the historical response of climate to increases in greenhouse gases. Secondary organic aerosol (SOA), formed in the atmosphere by oxidation of organic gases, represents a major fraction of global submicron‐sized atmospheric organic aerosol. Over the past decade, significant advances in understanding SOA properties and formation mechanisms have occurred through measurements, yet current climate models typically do not comprehensively include all important processes. This review summarizes some of the important developments during the past decade in understanding SOA formation. We highlight the importance of some processes that influence the growth of SOA particles to sizes relevant for clouds and radiative forcing, including formation of extremely low volatility organics in the gas phase, acid‐catalyzed multiphase chemistry of isoprene epoxydiols, particle‐phase oligomerization, and physical properties such as volatility and viscosity. Several SOA processes highlighted in this review are complex and interdependent and have nonlinear effects on the properties, formation, and evolution of SOA. Current global models neglect this complexity and nonlinearity and thus are less likely to accurately predict the climate forcing of SOA and project future climate sensitivity to greenhouse gases. Efforts are also needed to rank the most influential processes and nonlinear process‐related interactions, so that these processes can be accurately represented in atmospheric chemistry‐climate models.
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    Recent advances in understanding secondary organic aerosol: Implications for global climate forcing” is a paper by Manish Shrivastava Christopher D. Cappa Jiwen Fan Allen H. Goldstein Alex Guenther José L. Jimenez Chongai Kuang Alexander Laskin Scot T. Martin N. L. Ng Tuukka Petäj̈ä Jeffrey R. Pierce Philip J. Rasch Pontus Roldin John H. Seinfeld John E. Shilling James N. Smith Joel A. Thornton Rainer Volkamer Jian Wang Douglas R. Worsnop Rahul A. Zaveri Alla Zelenyuk Qi Zhang published in 2017. It has an Open Access status of “bronze”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.