2 research outputs found
Solubility Considerations for Cloud Condensation Nuclei (CCN) Activity Analysis of Pure and Mixed Black Carbon Species
Black carbon (BC) is an aerosol that is released into
the atmosphere
due to the incomplete burning of biomass and can affect the climate
directly or indirectly. BC commonly mixes with other primary or secondary
aerosols to undergo aging, thereby changing its radiative properties
and cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) activity. The composition of aged
BC species in the atmosphere is difficult to measure with high confidence,
so their associated CCN activity can be uncertain. In this work, the
CCN activity analysis of BC was performed using laboratory measurements
of proxy aged BC species. Vulcan XC72R carbon black was used as the
representative of BC, and three structural isomers of benzenedicarboxylic
acidphthalic acid (PTA), isophthalic acid (IPTA), and terephthalic
acid (TPTA)were mixed with BC to generate three different
proxies of aged BC species. Most studies related to CCN activity analysis
of BC aerosols use the traditional Köhler theory or an adsorption
theory (such as the Frenkel–Halsey–Hill adsorption theory).
PTA, IPTA, and TPTA fall in the sparingly water-soluble range and
therefore do not fully obey either of the aforementioned theories.
Consequently, a novel hybrid activity model (HAM) was used for the
CCN activity analysis of the BC mixtures studied in this work. HAM
combines the features of adsorption theory via the adsorption isotherm
with the features of Köhler theory by incorporating solubility
partitioning. The results in this work showed that HAM improves the
representation of CCN activity of pure and mixed BC aerosol species
with high certainty, evident from generally better goodness of fit, R2 > 0.9. This work implies that the hygroscopicity
parameterization based on HAM captures the size-dependent variability
in the CCN activity of the pure and aged BC species
Liquid–Liquid Phase Separation Can Drive Aerosol Droplet Growth in Supersaturated Regimes
It is well known that atmospheric aerosol size and composition
impact air quality, climate, and health. The aerosol composition is
typically a mixture and consists of a wide range of organic and inorganic
particles that interact with each other. Furthermore, water vapor
is ubiquitous in the atmosphere, in indoor air, and within the human
body’s respiratory system, and the presence of water can alter
the aerosol morphology and propensity to form droplets. Specifically,
aerosol mixtures can undergo liquid–liquid phase separation
(LLPS) in the presence of water vapor. However, the experimental conditions
for which LLPS impacts water uptake and the subsequent prediction
of aerosol mixtures are poorly understood. To improve our understanding
of aerosol mixtures and droplets, this study explores two ternary
systems that undergo LLPS, namely, the 2MGA system (sucrose + ammonium
sulfate + 2-methylglutaric acid) and the PEG1000 system (sucrose +
ammonium sulfate + polyethylene glycol 1000). In this study, the ratio
of species and the O:C ratios are systematically changed, and the
hygroscopic properties of the resultant aerosol were investigated.
Here, we show that the droplet activation above 100% RH of the 2MGA
system was influenced by LLPS, while the droplet activation of the
PEG1000 system was observed to be linearly additive regardless of
chemical composition, O:C ratio, and LLPS. A theoretical model that
accounts for LLPS with O:C ratios was developed and predicts the water
uptake of internally mixed systems of different compositions and phase
states. Hence, this study provides a computationally efficient algorithm
to account for the LLPS and solubility parameterized by the O:C ratio for droplet activation at supersaturated
relative humidity conditions and may thus be extended to mixed inorganic–organic
aerosol populations with unspeciated organic composition found in
the ambient environment
