• Skip to Page content
  • Skip to Management
  • Skip to Main menu
Adlershof - science at work
  • WISTA
  • WISTA.Plan
  • WISTA.Service
  • WISTA direkt
  • Search
    • de
    • en
  • Adlershof - science at work
  • Technology Park
    • Companies / Institutes
    • Science City in numbers
    • Direction / Maps
      • Bus / Train
      • By Car
      • Bicycle
      • Orientation / Maps
      • Trail of Thoughts
  • Newsroom
    • Overview
    • News
      • Social Media Stream
      • Success Stories
    • Events / Calendar
      • Adlershof Connect
      • Long Night of Sciences Berlin
      • Adlershof Research Forum
    • Adlershof Journal
    • Hot Topics
      • Grand Challenges
      • Circular Economy
      • Climate change mitigation
      • Digital infra­structure / 5G campus network
    • Photos / Flyer / Downloads
      • Magazine archive
    • WISTA-Editorial Staff
  • Science / Technology
    • Overview
    • Technology Centres
      • Photonics / Optics
      • Biotech­nology / Envi­ron­ment
      • Micro­systems / Materi­als
      • IT / Media
      • Renewable Energy / Photovoltaics
    • Non-university Research
    • Universities / Colleges
      • Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
      • Services for Students
    • Young Talents / STEM / School Labs
    • Start-Ups
      • Adlershof Start-Up Centre IGZ
      • Adlershof Startup Lab
    • Networks / Management
      • Campus Club Adlershof
      • workhier! Academics Career Programme
      • WISTA Academy
  • TV / Media
    • TV and Movie Production
    • Media Services / Companies
    • News and Events
    • Filming Locations
    • Costume Hire
    • GDR Film Archive
    • Tickets / Booking
  • Properties
    • Overview
    • Real Estate Rent
      • Office Space / Workspace / Laboratories
    • Real Estate Offers
      • Commercial Properties
    • ST3AM Working Environments / Coworking
    • Residential
    • Construction
      • Building Projects
      • Architecture
      • Webcam
  • Service
    • Overview
    • Gastronomy / Leisure / Shopping
    • Jobs / Market
    • Social and Healthcare Facilities
    • WISTA-Business Services
    • Event Services / Guided Tours / Hotels
    • Facility Management
    • Downloads / Photos / Videos
    • Jobs for Refugees
  • Hood
    • Overview
    • History
    • Nature Park
    • Culture
    • Technology Park
    • Digital Tours
  • WISTA
  • WISTA.Plan
  • WISTA.Service
WISTA direkt
  • Home Technology Park
  • Newsroom
  • News

News

  • Overview
  • News
  • Events / Calendar
  • Adlershof Journal
  • Hot Topics
  • Photos / Flyer / Downloads
  • WISTA-Editorial Staff
  • Home Technology Park
  • Newsroom
  • News
16. April 2026

Environmental Chemistry at BESSY II: Radicals in waterways

HZB research group unravels the light-induced formation of hydroxyl radicals from nitrite

Molecule model with coloured markers
How the radical scavenger TEMPO traps a hydroxyl radical OH·. The proton of the hydroxyl radical reacts with TEMPO first. Colour coding: grey for C (carbon), white for H (hydrogen), red for O (oxygen) and blue for N (nitrogen). © HZB

How do radicals form in aqueous solutions when exposed to UV light? This question is important for health research and environmental protection, for example with regard to the overfertilisation of water bodies by intensive agriculture. A team at BESSY II has now developed a new method of investigating hydroxyl radicals in solution. By using a clever trick, the scientists gained surprising insights into the reaction pathway.

Hydroxyl radicals (OH·) are found everywhere, from the troposphere to the cells of the human body. There, they cause oxidative stress and accelerate the ageing process. They are also increasingly present in rivers and lakes, where they are formed by the photolysis of nitrogen oxides that have entered the water from over-fertilised soils. When UV radiation from sunlight strikes nitrogen oxides, hydroxyl radicals and a range of other radicals are generated. The chemistry of these radicals is extremely difficult to characterise accurately, as they react very quickly

A team led by Professor Alexander Föhlisch of the HZB has investigated the chemistry of hydroxyl radicals formed from nitrogen oxides in water using X-ray absorption spectroscopy at the BESSY II X-ray source.

‘We work with a liquid jet sample cell, in which we can study molecules in solution under highly realistic conditions. This is only possible at BESSY II,’ says Leo Cordsmeier, the study's first author. The scientists exploited the fact that certain molecules can ‘capture’ radicals. The molecule TEMPO is known as a radical scavenger for both carbon and nitrogen oxide radicals. ‘We use TEMPO here as a kind of trick,’ explains Cordsmeier. ‘It serves here as a “sensor” because this molecule is directly involved in the reaction and can be detected very easily in our experiment. This enables us to analyse the reaction of the OH radicals directly.'

In this way, they could observe, step by step, how radicals form in aqueous solutions containing nitrogen oxides when irradiated with UV light and how they are bound by TEMPO. In doing so, they also succeeded in measuring an unexpected intermediate state, enabling the reaction pathway to be reconstructed with precision. Their results show that the proton of the hydroxyl radical reacts with TEMPO first. ‘For the scavenging of hydroxyl radicals by TEMPO, we show that the mechanism does not proceed through a bound intermediate state between the two molecules, as has been proposed in the literature, but instead through an electron transfer. This is a surprising finding,' says Alexander Föhlisch. This study has enabled his team to develop a new method for investigating radicals in solution, allowing them to selectively observe where bonds break and new ones form.

Publication:

JACS (2026): Mechanisms of Hydroxyl Radical Chemistry in Aqueous Solution Triggered by Photoexcitation and Probed by Soft X‑rays
Leo Cordsmeier, Wagner Ribeiro da Silva Neto, Mattis Fondell, Rolf Mitzner, Vinicius Vaz da Cruz, Sebastian Eckert, and Alexander Föhlisch
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.5c20053

Contact:

Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin für Materialien und Energie
Institute Methods and Instrumentation for Synchrotron Radiation Research

Leo Cordsmeier
(030) 8062-14919
leo.cordsmeier(at)helmholtz-berlin.de

Prof. Dr. Alexander Föhlisch
(030) 8062-14985
alexander.foehlisch(at)helmholtz-berlin.de

Pressestelle:
Dr. Antonia Rötger
(030) 8062-43733
antonia.roetger(at)helmholtz-berlin.de

 

HZB press release, 9 April 2026

Analytics Research Biotechnology / Environment Microsystems / Materials Photonics / Optics

Related News

  • Molecular geometry structures of fumarate, maleate and succinate dianions © HZB

    Molecular orbitals determine stability

    Team at HZB has elucidated the influence of the electronic structure on the stability of fumarate, maleate and succinate dianions
  • Illustration MoS₂ lattice structure © Martin Künsting/HZB

    Neutralising electronic inhomogeneity in cleaved bulk MoS₂

    HZB team investigated properties of molybdenum disulphide that can function as a photocatalyst in green hydrogen production
  • Illustration keto-enol equilibrium © Martin Künsting / HZB

    Unravelling tautomeric mixtures

    Resonant inelastic X-ray scattering (RIXS) at BESSY II provides detailed information on properties and biological function
  • Blackbox © Martin Künsting/HZB

    An efficient tool to link X-ray experiments and ab initio theory

    A team at BESSY II has developed a new simulation method that greatly accelerates the evaluation of inelastic X-ray scattering (RIXS) measurement data

Related Institutions

  • Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin für Materialien und Energie GmbH, Elektronenspeicherring BESSY II

Share this page

The development of the Science and Technology Park Berlin Adlershof was and is co-financed by the European Union namely by EFRE. This concerns infrastructure development like construction of technology centres. Furthermore EFRE is used for international projects.

  • © WISTA Management GmbH
  • Legal Notice
  • Privacy Policy
  • Social Media Guide
  • FAQ
  • Contact
  • Press
  • Newsletter
  • RSS
  • International
Member of:
Zukunftsort Adlershof Logo