Toward closure between predicted and observed particle viscosity over a wide range of temperatures and relative humidity
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Published:2021-01-27
Issue:2
Volume:21
Page:1127-1141
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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:
Kasparoglu SabinORCID, Li YingORCID, Shiraiwa ManabuORCID, Petters Markus D.ORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Atmospheric aerosols can exist in amorphous semi-solid or glassy phase
states whose viscosity varies with atmospheric temperature and relative
humidity. The temperature and humidity dependence of viscosity has
been hypothesized to be predictable from the combination of a water–organic
binary mixing rule of the glass transition temperature, a glass-transition-temperature-scaled viscosity fragility parameterization, and a water
uptake parameterization. This work presents a closure study between
predicted and observed viscosity for sucrose and citric acid. Viscosity
and glass transition temperature as a function of water content are
compiled from literature data and used to constrain the fragility
parameterization. New measurements characterizing viscosity of sub-100 nm particles using the dimer relaxation method are presented. These
measurements extend the available data of temperature- and humidity-dependent viscosity to −28 ∘C. Predicted relationships agree well
with observations at room temperature and with measured isopleths
of constant viscosity at ∼107 Pa s at temperatures warmer
than −28 ∘C. Discrepancies at colder temperatures
are observed for sucrose particles. Simulations with the kinetic multi-layer
model of gas–particle interactions suggest that the observed deviations
at colder temperature for sucrose can be attributed to kinetic limitations
associated with water uptake at the timescales of the dimer relaxation
experiments. Using the available information, updated equilibrium
phase-state diagrams (-80∘C<T<40∘C, temperature, and 0%<RH<100%, relative humidity) for sucrose
and citric acid are constructed and associated equilibration timescales
are identified.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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