Aerosol Phase Transformation and Growth in the Atmosphere
- 1 July 1994
- journal article
- Published by American Meteorological Society in Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology
- Vol. 33 (7) , 791-796
- https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0450(1994)033<0791:aptagi>2.0.co;2
Abstract
The dynamic behavior of hygroscopic multicomponent aerosols under the influence of changing relative humidity in the atmosphere is investigated. Laboratory measurements of the deliquescence humidity as a function of temperature between 5° and 35°C are carried out with single aerosol particles individually suspended in an electrodynamic cell. The single-particle levitation cell is placed in a vacuum chamber that can be evacuated and backfilled with water vapor. The phase transformation of the aerosol particle is monitored by laser light scattering, and the relative humidity at the transition point is determined by directly measuring the water vapor pressure in the cell. Results are obtained for aerosol particles composed of binary mixtures of NACl, KCl, NaNO3, Na2SO4, and (NH4)S2SO4, which are common constituents of ambient aerosols. The measured temperature and composition dependence of the deliquescence properties agrees well with a theoretical model based on thermodynamic considerations. A stud... Abstract The dynamic behavior of hygroscopic multicomponent aerosols under the influence of changing relative humidity in the atmosphere is investigated. Laboratory measurements of the deliquescence humidity as a function of temperature between 5° and 35°C are carried out with single aerosol particles individually suspended in an electrodynamic cell. The single-particle levitation cell is placed in a vacuum chamber that can be evacuated and backfilled with water vapor. The phase transformation of the aerosol particle is monitored by laser light scattering, and the relative humidity at the transition point is determined by directly measuring the water vapor pressure in the cell. Results are obtained for aerosol particles composed of binary mixtures of NACl, KCl, NaNO3, Na2SO4, and (NH4)S2SO4, which are common constituents of ambient aerosols. The measured temperature and composition dependence of the deliquescence properties agrees well with a theoretical model based on thermodynamic considerations. A stud...Keywords
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