Affiliation:
1. Department of Chemistry Purdue University West Lafayette IN 47907 USA
2. Elmore Family School of Electrical and Computer Engineering Purdue University West Lafayette IN 47907 USA
Abstract
AbstractLiquid aerosols are ubiquitous in nature, and several tools exist to quantify their physicochemical properties. As a measurement science technique, electrochemistry has not played a large role in aerosol analysis because electrochemistry in air is rather difficult. Here, a remarkably simple method is demonstrated to capture and electroanalyze single liquid aerosol particles with radii on the order of single micrometers. An electrochemical cell is constructed by a microwire (cylindrical working electrode) traversing a film of ionic liquid (1‐butyl‐1‐methylpyrrolidinium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide) that is suspended within a wire loop (reference/counter electrode). An ionic liquid is chosen because the low vapor pressure preserves the film over weeks, vastly improving suspended film electroanalysis. The resultant high surface area allows the suspended ionic liquid cell to act as an aerosol net. Given the hydrophobic nature of the ionic liquid, aqueous aerosol particles do not coalesce into the film. When the liquid aerosols collide with the sufficiently biased microwire (creating a complex boundary: aerosol|wire|ionic liquid|air), the electrochemistry within a single liquid aerosol particle can be interrogated in real‐time. The ability to achieve liquid aerosol size distributions for aerosols over 1 µm in radius is demonstrated.
Funder
National Science Foundation
Cited by
1 articles.
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1. Single Entity Electrocatalysis;Chemical Reviews;2024-07-17