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The generation of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and the depletion of oxalic acid by photochemical/chemical cycling of Fe(III)/Fe(II)-oxalato complexes in sunlight has been studied under the conditions typical for acidified atmospheric water. H2O2 is produced through the reduction of oxygen by intermediates formed from photoreactions of Fe(III)-oxalato complexes. The rate of H2O2 formation increases with sunlight intensity, and with oxalate and Fe(III) concentration within the concentration range used. This rate is 3.7 nM s-1 when 1 μM Fe(III) and 5 μM oxalate at pH 4 is exposed to September noon sunlight. Speciation calculations based on the concentration range of Fe(III) and oxalic acid in atmospheric water indicate that Fe(III)-oxalato complexes are often the predominant species of dissolved Fe(III). The concentrations of Fe(III)-oxalato complexes are sufficiently large to make their photolysis a dominant source of in-cloud H2O2, O2·-, HO2, and OH radicals and a major sink for atmospheric oxalic acid.
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Yuegang Zuo
University of Massachusetts Dartmouth
Juerg. Hoigne
École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
Environmental Science & Technology
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Zuo et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69de9bef7702a00918b0c083 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1021/es00029a022