"You can't have a lot of confidence in the predicted levels right now," said lead author Veronique Perraud, assistant project scientist to pioneering UC Irvine air chemist Barbara Finlayson-Pitts. "It's extremely important, because if the models do a bad job of predicting particles, we may be underestimating the effects on the public."
An independent expert who reviewed the research for PNAS agreed.
"The conclusions are highly significant," said Purdue University atmospheric chemist Paul Shepson. "This paper should — and, I expect, will — have a big impact. We've known for nearly a decade that there's a huge difference between what's in the models and what's actually in the air. Thanks to this paper, we have a much better idea of why."
Scientists at UC Irvine, a U.S. Department of Energy laboratory and Portland State University combined pinene, a common ingredient in household cleaners such as Pine-Sol and outdoor emissions, with oxides of nitrogen and ozone to mimic smog buildup.
Models used by regulators for decades have assumed that organic aerosols in such pollution form liquid droplets that quickly dissolve potentially unhealthy gases. But the new work found that once gases are sucked into a particle, they get buried deeper and deeper.
"They check in, and they don't check out. They cannot escape. The material does not readily evaporate and may live longer and grow faster in total mass than previously thought," Finlayson-Pitts said. "This is consistent with related studies showing that smog particles may be an extremely viscous tar."
Perraud noted that broader study needs to be done: "The next logical step is to straighten the models out. We need enough follow-up data to do so."
Sophisticated tools made it easier to pinpoint the exact characteristics of chemical compounds in air. The scientists used a 26-foot-long "aerosol flow tube" at the AirUCI unit and a one-of-a-kind, 900-pound instrument known as SPLAT (a single particle laser ablation time-of-flight mass spectrometer) at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.
Co-authors are Emily Bruns, Wayne Chang, Donald Dabdub, Michael Ezell, Stanley Johnson and Yong Yu of UC Irvine; M. Lizabeth Alexander and Alla Zelenyuk of PNNL; Dan Imre of Imre Consulting; and James F. Pankow of Portland State University. Funding was provided by the U.S. Department of Energy and the National Science Foundation.
About the University of California, Irvine: Founded in 1965, UC Irvine is a top-ranked university dedicated to research, scholarship and community service. Led by Chancellor Michael Drake since 2005, UC Irvine is among the most dynamic campuses in the University of California system, with nearly 28,000 undergraduate and graduate students, 1,100 faculty and 9,000 staff. Orange County's second-largest employer, UC Irvine contributes an annual economic impact of $4 billion. For more news, visit www.today.uci.edu.

