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Michael E. Jenkin

Researcher at University of Bristol

Publications -  171
Citations -  22725

Michael E. Jenkin is an academic researcher from University of Bristol. The author has contributed to research in topics: Atmospheric chemistry & Isoprene. The author has an hindex of 62, co-authored 168 publications receiving 20099 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael E. Jenkin include Max Planck Society & AeA.

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Photochemical ozone creation potentials for oxygenated volatile organic compounds: sensitivity to variations in kinetic and mechanistic parameters

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the sensitivity of ozone creation potential to a series of systematic variations in the rates and products of reactions of radical intermediates and oxygenated products, using the recently developed Master Chemical Mechanism (MCM) as the base case.
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Evaluated kinetic and photochemical data for atmospheric chemistry: Volume VI - heterogeneous reactions with liquid substrates

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present data evaluated by the IUPAC Task Group on Atmospheric Chemical Kinetic Data Evaluation (IUPAC-TKDE), with an emphasis on those relevant for the upper troposphere/lower stratosphere and the marine boundary layer.
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Evaluation of detailed aromatic mechanisms (MCMv3 and MCMv3.1) against environmental chamber data

TL;DR: In this paper, a high quality dataset on the photo-oxidation of benzene, toluene, p-xylene and 1,3,5-trimethylbenzene has been obtained from experiments in the European Photoreactor (EUPHORE), a large outdoor environmental reaction chamber.
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Halogen oxides: Radicals, sources and reservoirs in the laboratory and in the atmosphere

TL;DR: In this article, a review of the relationship between the laboratory investigations and the atmospheric studies is presented, focusing on gas-phase processes of halogen oxides and their precursors in the laboratory and the atmosphere.
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Development and application of a possible mechanism for the generation of cis-pinic acid from the ozonolysis of α- and β-pinene

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that the isomerisation of a complex C 9 acyl-oxy radical by a 1,7 H atom shift is able to compete with the alternative decomposition to CO 2 and a C 8 organic radical.