Abstract. The impact of molecular level surface chemistry for aerosol water-uptake and droplet growth is not well understood. In this work, spherical, nonporous, monodisperse polystyrene latex (PSL) particles treated with different surface functional groups are exploited to isolate the effects of aerosol surface chemistry for droplet activation. PSL is effectively water insoluble and changes in the particle surface may be considered acritical factor in the initial water uptake of water-insoluble material. The droplet growth of two surface modified types of PSL (PSL-NH2 andPSL-COOH) along with plain PSL was measured in a supersaturated environmentwith a Cloud Condensation Nuclei Counter (CCNC). Three droplet growth models – traditional Köhler (TK), Flory–Huggins Köhler (FHK) and the Frenkel–Halsey–Hill adsorption theory (FHH-AT) were compared with experimental data. The experimentally determined single hygroscopicity parameter, κ, was found within the range from 0.002 to 0.04. The traditional Köhler prediction assumes Raoult's law solute dissolution and underestimates the water-uptake ability of the PSL particles. FHK can be applied to polymeric aerosol; however, FHK assumes that the polymer is soluble and hydrophilic. Thus, the FHK model generates a negative result for hydrophobic PSL and predicts non-activation behavior that disagrees with the experimental observation. The FHH-AT model assumes that a particle is water insoluble and can be fit with two empirical parameters (AFHH and BFHH). The FHH-AT prediction agrees with the experimental data and can differentiate the water uptake behavior of the particles owing to surface modification of PSL surface. PSL-NH2 exhibits slightly higher hygroscopicity than the PSL-COOH, whereas plain PSL is the least hygroscopic among the three. This result is consistent with the polarity of surface functional groups and their affinity to water molecules. Thus, changes in AFHH and BFHH can be quantified when surface modification is isolated for the study of water-uptake. The fitted AFHH for PSL-NH2, PSL-COOH, and plain PSL is 0.23, 0.21, and 0.18 when BFHH is unity. To simplify the use of FHH-AT for use in cloud activation models, we also present and test a new single parameter framework for insoluble compounds, κFHH. κFHH is within 5 % agreement ofthe experimental data and can be applied to describe a single-parameterhygroscopicity for water-insoluble aerosol with surface modified properties.
more »
« less
Imaging Dissolution Dynamics of Individual NaCl Nanoparticles during Deliquescence with In Situ Transmission Electron Microscopy
Water vapor condensation on hygroscopic aerosol particles plays an important role in cloud formation, climate change, secondary aerosol formation, and aerosol aging. Conventional understanding considers deliquescence of nanosized hygroscopic aerosol particles a nearly instantaneous solid to liquid phase transition. However, the nanoscale dynamics of water condensation and aerosol particle dissolution prior to and during deliquescence remain obscure due to a lack of high spatial and temporal resolution single particle measurements. Here we use real time in situ transmission electron microscopy (TEM) imaging of individual sodium chloride (NaCl) nanoparticles to demonstrate that water adsorption and aerosol particle dissolution prior to and during deliquescence is a multistep dynamic process. Water condensation and aerosol particle dissolution was investigated for lab generated NaCl aerosols and found to occur in three distinct stages as a function of increasing RH. First, a < 100 nm water layer adsorbed on the NaCl cubes and caused sharp corners to dissolve and truncate. The water layer grew to several hundred nanometers with increasing RH and was rapidly saturated with solute, as evidenced by halting of particle dissolution. Adjacent cube corners displayed second-scale curvature fluctuations with no net particle dissolution or water layer thickness change. We propose that droplet solute concentration fluctuations drove NaCl transport from regions of high local curvature to regions of low curvature. Finally, we observed coexistence of a liquid water droplet and aerosol particle immediately prior to deliquescence. Particles dissolved discretely along single crystallographic directions, separating by few second lag times with no dissolution. This work demonstrates that deliquescence of simple pure salt particles with sizes in the range of 100 nm to several microns is not an instantaneous phase transition and instead involves a range of complex dissolution and water condensation dynamics.
more »
« less
- Award ID(s):
- 2003927
- PAR ID:
- 10519067
- Publisher / Repository:
- ChemRxiv
- Date Published:
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Institution:
- University of Maryland
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
More Like this
-
-
Polycatechol and polyguaiacol are light-absorbing and water-insoluble particles that efficiently form from iron-catalyzed reactions with aromatic compounds from biomass burning emissions. Little quantitative information is known about their water uptake and cloud or haze droplet formation ability. In this study, polycatechol and polyguaiacol particles were synthesized in the laboratory, and their cloud condensation nucleation efficiencies were investigated under sub- and supersaturated relative humidity (RH) conditions using a hygroscopicity tandem differential mobility analyzer (H-TDMA) and a cloud condensation nuclei counter (CCNC), respectively. Experimental results show that both polymeric materials are slightly hygroscopic and that their single hygroscopicity parameter ( κ ) ranges from 0.03 to 0.25, which is within the κ range for secondary organic aerosols (SOA). Polycatechol is more hygroscopic than polyguaiacol, which is explained by differences in their structure. Polyguaiacol has similar water uptake as other insoluble organic compounds, and droplet formation is modelled well with Brunauer–Emmett–Teller (BET) or Frankel Hill Hershey-Adsorption Isotherm theory (FHH-AT). Both polymeric materials are not strongly surface active in range of 0.5 to 30 g L −1 , and thus differences in subsaturated and supersaturated hygroscopicity measurement are not attributed to the presence of surface-active materials. Instead, it is due to the solubility limits of both chemicals and H-TDMA being driven by water adsorption. The implications of these results are discussed in the context of aerosol–cloud interactions from the hygroscopicity of aerosols from primary and secondary sources.more » « less
-
Internally-mixed aerosol particles containing organic molecules and inorganic salts are prevalent in the atmosphere, arising from direct emission ( e.g., from the ocean) or indirect production by condensation of organic vapors onto existing inorganic particle seeds. Aerosol particles co-exist with water vapor and, under humid conditions, will exist as dilute aqueous solution particles that can be well described by thermodynamic models. Under low humidity conditions, the increase in solute concentrations leads to molecular interactions and significant non-ideality effects that drive changes in important physical properties, such as viscosity and phase state, that are not predicted using simple models. Here, we explore a model system containing ammonium sulfate (AS) and citric acid (CA). We measure the hygroscopicity, viscosity, and rate of water diffusion in particles across a range of RH conditions and organic fractions to better understand the influence of organic–inorganic mixtures on particle properties. We report the RH dependence of these properties and explore the applicability of commonly used methods that connect them together, such as the Stokes–Einstein relationship and thermodynamic modelling methods. We show that at low RH, the addition of AS to CA leads to a reduction in the amount of water as indicated by the radial growth factor at a fixed RH, while observing an increase in the viscosity over several orders of magnitude. Contrary to the viscosity, only minor changes in water diffusion were measured, and analysis with the fractional Stokes–Einstein relationship indicates that changes in the molecular matrix due to the presence of AS could explain the observed phenomena. This work reveals that small additions of electrolytes can drive large changes in particle properties, with implications for chemical reactivity, lifetime, and particle phase that will influence the environmental impacts and chemistry of aerosol particles.more » « less
-
Aerosol indirect effects are one of the leading contributors to cloud radiative properties relevant to climate. Aerosol particles become cloud droplets when the ambient relative humidity (saturation ratio) exceeds a critical value, which depends on the particle size and chemical composition. In the traditional formulation of this problem, only average, uniform saturation ratios are considered. Using experiments and theory, we examine the effects of fluctuations, produced by turbulence. Our measurements, from a multiphase, turbulent cloud chamber, show a clear transition from a regime in which the mean saturation ratio dominates to one in which the fluctuations determine cloud properties. The laboratory measurements demonstrate cloud formation in mean-subsaturated conditions (i.e., relative humidity <100%) in the fluctuation-dominant activation regime. The theoretical framework developed to interpret these measurements predicts a transition from a mean- to a fluctuation-dominated regime, based on the relative values of the mean and standard deviation of the environmental saturation ratio and the critical saturation ratio at which aerosol particles activate or become droplets. The theory is similar to the concept of stochastic condensation and can be used in the context of the atmosphere to explore the conditions under which droplet activation is driven by fluctuations as opposed to mean supersaturation. It provides a basis for future development of cloud droplet activation parameterizations that go beyond the internally homogeneous parcel calculations that have been used in the past.more » « less
-
Sea salt aerosols contribute significantly to the mass loading of ambient aerosol, which may serve as cloud condensation nuclei and can contribute to light scattering in the atmosphere. Two major chemical components commonly found in sea salts are ammonium sulfate (AS) and sodium chloride (NaCl). It has been shown that alkylamines, derivatives of ammonia, can react with ammonium salts in the particle-phase to displace ammonia and likely change the particle properties. This study investigated the effects of atmospheric alkylamines on the composition and properties of sea salt aerosols using a chemical system of methylamine (MA, as a proxy of alkylamines), AS and NaCl (as a proxy of sea salt aerosol). The concentrations of ammonia and MA in aqueous/gas phases at the thermodynamic equilibrium were determined using the Extended Aerosols and Inorganics Model (E-AIM) under varying initial inputs, along with the deliquescence relative humidity (DRH) and the corresponding particle water content. Our findings indicated a notable negative relationship between MA concentration and the DRH for both AS and NaCl while the effect of MA on NaCl is smaller than that on AS. The salt of MA in the particle phase may absorb water vapor and may lead to the displacement reaction between AS and NaCl due to the low solubility of sodium sulfate. The acidity in the particle phase also played a significant role in affecting the DRH of sea salt aerosols. Since both sea salt aerosol and alkylamines are emitted into the atmosphere from the ocean in large quantities, our study suggested the potential impact of alkylamines on the environment and the climate via the modification of sea salt aerosol properties.more » « less
An official website of the United States government

