- Caravan, Rebecca;
- Khan, M;
- Zádor, Judit;
- Sheps, Leonid;
- Antonov, Ivan;
- Rotavera, Brandon;
- Ramasesha, Krupa;
- Au, Kendrew;
- Chen, Ming-Wei;
- Rösch, Daniel;
- Osborn, David;
- Fittschen, Christa;
- Schoemaecker, Coralie;
- Duncianu, Marius;
- Grira, Asma;
- Dusanter, Sebastien;
- Tomas, Alexandre;
- Percival, Carl;
- Shallcross, Dudley;
- Taatjes, Craig
Methanol is a benchmark for understanding tropospheric oxidation, but is underpredicted by up to 100% in atmospheric models. Recent work has suggested this discrepancy can be reconciled by the rapid reaction of hydroxyl and methylperoxy radicals with a methanol branching fraction of 30%. However, for fractions below 15%, methanol underprediction is exacerbated. Theoretical investigations of this reaction are challenging because of intersystem crossing between singlet and triplet surfaces - ∼45% of reaction products are obtained via intersystem crossing of a pre-product complex - which demands experimental determinations of product branching. Here we report direct measurements of methanol from this reaction. A branching fraction below 15% is established, consequently highlighting a large gap in the understanding of global methanol sources. These results support the recent high-level theoretical work and substantially reduce its uncertainties.