A modeling approach to evaluate the uncertainty in estimating the evaporation behaviour and volatility of organic aerosols
-
Published:2012-04-18
Issue:4
Volume:5
Page:735-757
-
ISSN:1867-8548
-
Container-title:Atmospheric Measurement Techniques
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Atmos. Meas. Tech.
Author:
Fuentes E.,McFiggans G.
Abstract
Abstract. The uncertainty in determining the volatility behaviour of organic particles from thermograms using calibration curves and a kinetic model has been evaluated. In the analysis, factors such as re-condensation, departure from equilibrium and analysis methodology were considered as potential sources of uncertainty in deriving volatility distribution from thermograms obtained with currently used thermodenuder designs. The previously found empirical relationship between C* (saturation concentration) and T50 (temperature at which 50% of aerosol mass evaporates) was theoretically interpreted and tested to infer volatility distributions from experimental thermograms. The presented theoretical analysis shows that this empirical equation is in fact an equilibrium formulation, whose applicability is lessened as measurements deviate from equilibrium. While using a calibration curve between C* and T50 to estimate volatility properties was found to hold at equilibrium, significant underestimation was obtained under kinetically-controlled evaporation conditions. Because thermograms obtained at ambient aerosol loading levels are most likely to show departure from equilibrium, the application of a kinetic evaporation model is more suitable for inferring volatility properties of atmospheric samples than the calibration curve approach; however, the kinetic model analysis implies significant uncertainty, due to its sensitivity to the assumption of "effective" net kinetic evaporation and condensation coefficients. The influence of re-condensation on thermograms from the thermodenuder designs under study was found to be highly dependent on the particular experimental condition, with a significant potential to affect volatility estimations for aerosol mass loadings >50 μg m−3 and with increasing effective kinetic coefficient for condensation and decreasing particle size. These results show that the geometry of current thermodenuder systems should be modified to prevent re-condensation.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
Reference45 articles.
1. An, W. J., Pathak, R. K., Lee, B. H., and Pandis, S. N.: Aerosol Volatility Measurement Using an Improved Thermodenuder: Application to Secondary Organic Aerosol, J. Aerosol Sci, 38, 305–314, 2007. 2. Bilde, M., Svenningsson, B., Monster, J. and Rosenorn, T.: Even-Odd Alternation of Evaporation Rates and Vapor Pressures of C3-C9 Dicarboxylic Acid Aerosols, Environ. Sci. Technol, 37, 1371–1378, 2003. 3. Burtscher, H., Baltensperger, U., Bukowiecki, N., Cohn, P., Huglin, C., Mohr, M., Matter, U., Nyeki, S., Schmatloch, V., Streit, N., and Weingartner, E.: Separation of Volatile and Non-Volatile Aerosol Fractions by Thermodesorption: Instrumental Development and Applications, J. Aerosol Sci. 32, 427–442, 2001. 4. Campo, A.: On the Asymptotic Solution of the Graetz-Nusselt Problem for Short x→0 and Large x→∞ with Partial Usage of Finite Differences, Numer. Meth. Part. D. E., 20, 6, 820–830, 2004. 5. Cappa, C. D.: A model of aerosol evaporation kinetics in a thermodenuder, Atmos. Meas. Tech., 3, 579–592, https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-3-579-2010, 2010.
Cited by
17 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|