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Article Abstract

The environmental and health risks of fluorinated compounds have attracted more and more attention due to their essential roles in the human body and potential contributions to greenhouse effects. Herein, the degradation mechanisms, kinetics properties, subsequent transformations, and atmospheric lifetimes of difluoroacetone (CFHC(O)CH) initiated by the Cl atom and OH radical were investigated in the atmosphere and at the air-water interface. The reaction coefficients and product branching ratios (or regioselectivity) for H-abstraction channels were calculated and analyzed within the range of 200-800 K by using multi-structural canonical variational transition state theory with small curvature tunneling (MS-CVT/SCT). At 297 K, the total rate coefficients of CFHC(O)CH with the OH radical and Cl atom are, respectively, 1.39 × 10 and 8.04 × 10 cm molecule s, which are consistent with the existing experimental data. In the presence of HO, O, and NO, CFHC(O)CH can convert into COF and CO as end products. Our findings indicate that the OH radical plays a more significant role in determining the atmospheric lifetime of CFHC(O)CH than the Cl atom. At the air-water interface, the H-abstraction reaction of CFHC(O)CH induced by the OH radical occurs more rapidly at the -CH site (0.50 ps) than at the -CFH site (2.50 ps), which is opposite to the selectivity of the gas-phase reaction. This study contributes to understanding the evolution mechanism of fluorinated acetone in a complex environment and improves our understanding of atmospheric chemical effects on aerosol surfaces.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d5cp00279fDOI Listing

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