Understanding the nanoscale water condensation dynamics
in strong
electric fields is important for improving the atmospheric modeling
of cloud dynamics and emerging technologies utilizing electric fields
for direct air moisture capture. Here, we use vapor-phase transmission
electron microscopy (VPTEM) to directly image nanoscale condensation
dynamics of sessile water droplets in electric fields. VPTEM imaging
of saturated water vapor stimulated condensation of sessile water
nanodroplets that grew to a size of ∼500 nm before evaporating
over a time scale of a minute. Simulations showed that electron beam
charging of the silicon nitride microfluidic channel windows generated
electric fields of ∼108 V/m, which depressed the
water vapor pressure and effected rapid nucleation of nanosized liquid
water droplets. A mass balance model showed that droplet growth was
consistent with electric field-induced condensation, while droplet
evaporation was consistent with radiolysis-induced evaporation via conversion of water to hydrogen gas. The model quantified
several electron beam–sample interactions and vapor transport
properties, showed that electron beam heating was insignificant, and
demonstrated that literature values significantly underestimated radiolytic
hydrogen production and overestimated water vapor diffusivity. This
work demonstrates a method for investigating water condensation in
strong electric fields and under supersaturated conditions, which
is relevant to vapor–liquid equilibrium in the troposphere.
While this work identifies several electron beam–sample interactions
that impact condensation dynamics, quantification of these phenomena
here is expected to enable delineating these artifacts from the physics
of interest and accounting for them when imaging more complex vapor–liquid
equilibrium phenomena with VPTEM