Project Details
Biogeochemical processes and Air-sea exchange in the Sea-Surface microlayer (BASS): Chemical and photochemical transformation of organic matter
Applicants
Professor Dr. Gernot Friedrichs; Professor Dr. Bernd Hartke; Professor Dr. Hartmut Herrmann
Subject Area
Oceanography
Term
since 2022
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 451574234
The sea-surface microlayer (SML), a ubiquitous feature of the ocean surface with usually < 1mm thickness, forms the boundary layer between atmosphere and ocean. Direct exposure to UV radiation and to oxidizing species from the atmosphere as well as the increased concentrations of photosensitizers and reactants compared to the underlying bulk water trigger SML-specific reactions. However, neither their roles in overall organic matter transformation or emission of volatile organic compounds to the atmosphere nor their implementation in air-sea interaction models are sufficiently well constrained or understood until now. In this project, which will be closely interlinked with other interdisciplinary project proposals within the research unit “Biogeochemical processes and Air-sea exchange in the Sea-Surface microlayer (BASS)”, we will address molecular details of abiotic SML-specific photochemical, heterogeneous oxidation, and radical-driven reactions. We aim to quantitatively describe the interfacial product formation and to better quantify differences in chemical conversion turnover and selectivity between underlying bulk water and SML. Combining the expertise of three research groups, advanced photochemical, laser-based kinetic and spectroscopic, analytical, and molecular modeling techniques will be combined to improve our molecular-level and mechanistic understanding of such processes in the complex marine SML reaction environment. In particular, the planned research benefits from a wide variety of methods, including state-of-the art vibrational sum-frequency spectroscopy, ultra-performance liquid chromatography mass spectrometry, laser flash photolysis-laser long path absorption, as well as molecular dynamics simulations and quantum-chemistry calculations. Planned work packages focus on the oxidation kinetics of SML bulk and monolayer proxies (e.g., halogen/hydroxyl radical reactions, ozonolysis of surface-active fatty acids), the photochemical reactivity of SML proxies with natural and model photosensitizers (e.g., enhanced radical formation and organic monolayer decomposition), and the analysis of ambient samples (e.g., by targeting surfactant formation and photolysis products during a bloom event). All this will be complemented by method developments, comprising refined measurement protocols for quantitative analysis of organic compounds (e.g., carbonyls and carbohydrates), the development of surface-active photosensitizers (e.g., benzoylbenzoic acid derived lipids), and the implementation of multilevel modeling schemes as needed to get a full theoretical understanding of structure-reactivity trends of fatty acid ozonolysis (e.g., calculation of rate constants by considering steric and electronic effects of the organic matrix).
DFG Programme
Research Units
Subproject of
FOR 5267:
Biogeochemical processes and Air-sea exchange in the Sea-Surface microlayer (BASS)
Co-Investigators
Dr. Manuela van Pinxteren; Dr. Thomas Schaefer