Hygroscopicity of organic compounds as a function of organic functionality, water solubility, molecular weight, and oxidation level
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Published:2022-03-28
Issue:6
Volume:22
Page:3985-4004
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ISSN:1680-7324
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Container-title:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Chem. Phys.
Author:
Han Shuang, Hong Juan, Luo Qingwei, Xu Hanbing, Tan Haobo, Wang Qiaoqiao, Tao Jiangchuan, Zhou Yaqing, Peng Long, He Yao, Shi Jingnan, Ma Nan, Cheng YafangORCID, Su HangORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Aerosol hygroscopicity strongly influences the number
size distribution, phase state, optical properties, and multiphase
chemistry of aerosol particles. Due to the large number of organic species in
atmospheric aerosols, the determination of the hygroscopicity of ambient
aerosols remains challenging. In this study, we measured the hygroscopic
properties of 23 organics, including carboxylic acids, amino acids, sugars,
and alcohols, using a hygroscopicity tandem differential mobility analyzer
(HTDMA). Earlier studies have characterized the hygroscopicity either for a
limited number of organic compounds using similar techniques or for
particles at sizes beyond the microscale range or even bulk samples using
other methodologies. Here, we validate these studies and extend the data by
measuring the hygroscopicity of a broader suite of organics for particles
with sizes under the submicrometer range that are more atmospherically relevant.
Moreover, we systematically evaluate the roles of that related physicochemical
properties play in organic hygroscopicity. We show that the hygroscopicity
of organics varies widely with functional groups and organics with the same
carbon number but that more functional groups show higher hygroscopicity.
However, some isomers that are very similar in molecular structure show
quite different hygroscopicity, demonstrating that other physicochemical
properties, such as water solubility, may contribute to their hygroscopicity
as well. If the organics are fully dissolved in water (solubility
>7×10-1 g mL−1), we found that their hygroscopicity
is mainly controlled by their molecular weight. For the organics that are
not fully dissolved in water (slightly soluble: 5×10-4 g mL−1
< solubility < 7×10-1 g mL−1), we observed that
some of them show no obvious water uptake, which is probably due to the fact that they
may not deliquesce under our studied conditions up to 90 % relative humidity (RH). The other
type of slightly soluble organic material is moderately hygroscopic, and the larger
its solubility is, the higher its hygroscopicity will be. Moreover, the
hygroscopicity of organics generally increased with O:C ratios, although
this relationship is not linear.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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