- Home
- Search Results
- Page 1 of 1
Search for: All records
-
Total Resources3
- Resource Type
-
0000000003000000
- More
- Availability
-
21
- Author / Contributor
- Filter by Author / Creator
-
-
Michelsen, Hope A (2)
-
Bengtsson, Per-Erik (1)
-
Campbell, Matthew F (1)
-
Colket, Meredith B. (1)
-
Desgroux, Pascale (1)
-
D’Anna, Andrea (1)
-
Haynes, Brian S. (1)
-
Johansson, K Olof (1)
-
Lindstedt, R Peter (1)
-
Michelsen, Hope A. (1)
-
Miller, J. Houston (1)
-
Mueller, Michael E (1)
-
Nathan, Graham J. (1)
-
Pitsch, Heinz (1)
-
Schrader, Paul E (1)
-
Wang, Hai (1)
-
Wilson, Kevin R (1)
-
#Tyler Phillips, Kenneth E. (0)
-
#Willis, Ciara (0)
-
& Abreu-Ramos, E. D. (0)
-
- Filter by Editor
-
-
& Spizer, S. M. (0)
-
& . Spizer, S. (0)
-
& Ahn, J. (0)
-
& Bateiha, S. (0)
-
& Bosch, N. (0)
-
& Brennan K. (0)
-
& Brennan, K. (0)
-
& Chen, B. (0)
-
& Chen, Bodong (0)
-
& Drown, S. (0)
-
& Ferretti, F. (0)
-
& Higgins, A. (0)
-
& J. Peters (0)
-
& Kali, Y. (0)
-
& Ruiz-Arias, P.M. (0)
-
& S. Spitzer (0)
-
& Sahin. I. (0)
-
& Spitzer, S. (0)
-
& Spitzer, S.M. (0)
-
(submitted - in Review for IEEE ICASSP-2024) (0)
-
-
Have feedback or suggestions for a way to improve these results?
!
Note: When clicking on a Digital Object Identifier (DOI) number, you will be taken to an external site maintained by the publisher.
Some full text articles may not yet be available without a charge during the embargo (administrative interval).
What is a DOI Number?
Some links on this page may take you to non-federal websites. Their policies may differ from this site.
-
Soot is known for its enormous and pervasive negative impacts on human health and the environmental, but there much about soot that is not well known, including the precursors and chemical mechanisms involved in its formation. Many studies have characterized species associated with incipient particles, i.e., the first particles produced during soot formation. These studies provide insight into inception mechanisms, the pathways leading from gas-phase precursors to condensed-phase particles. Potential inception mechanisms involve one (or a combination) of two classes of pathways: physical nucleation, in which precursors undergo a thermodynamic phase change and are bound together by electrostatic forces, and chemical clustering, in which precursors react to form covalently bound clusters. In a recent paper, Shao et al.1 concluded that soot inception occurs through physical nucleation and claimed to have provided direct evidence of such a mechanism. We demonstrate that this conclusion is inconsistent with (1) the consensus of published work, (2) the data, theory, and analysis on which this conclusion is nominally based, and (3) the second law of thermodynamics. We show that, contrary to their conclusions, their experimental and theoretical results provide evidence for a chemical-clustering soot-inception mechanism.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available December 1, 2026
-
Lindstedt, R Peter; Michelsen, Hope A; Mueller, Michael E (, Combustion and Flame)
-
Michelsen, Hope A.; Colket, Meredith B.; Bengtsson, Per-Erik; D’Anna, Andrea; Desgroux, Pascale; Haynes, Brian S.; Miller, J. Houston; Nathan, Graham J.; Pitsch, Heinz; Wang, Hai (, ACS Nano)
An official website of the United States government
