Abstract

Abstract. Field measurements indicating that atmospheric secondary organic aerosol (SOA) particles can be present in a highly viscous, glassy state have spurred numerous studies addressing low diffusivities of water in glassy aerosols. The focus of these studies is on kinetic limitations of hygroscopic growth and the plasticizing effect of water. In contrast, much less is known about diffusion limitations of organic molecules and oxidants in viscous matrices. These may affect atmospheric chemistry and gas–particle partitioning of complex mixtures with constituents of different volatility. In this study, we quantify the diffusivity of a volatile organic in a viscous matrix. Evaporation of single particles generated from an aqueous solution of sucrose and small amounts of volatile tetraethylene glycol (PEG-4) is investigated in an electrodynamic balance at controlled relative humidity (RH) and temperature. The evaporative loss of PEG-4 as determined by Mie resonance spectroscopy is used in conjunction with a radially resolved diffusion model to retrieve translational diffusion coefficients of PEG-4. Comparison of the experimentally derived diffusivities with viscosity estimates for the ternary system reveals a breakdown of the Stokes–Einstein relationship, which has often been invoked to infer diffusivity from viscosity. The evaporation of PEG-4 shows pronounced RH and temperature dependencies and is severely depressed for RH ≲ 30 %, corresponding to diffusivities < 10−14 cm2 s−1 at temperatures < 15 °C. The temperature dependence is strong, suggesting a diffusion activation energy of about 300 kJ mol−1. We conclude that atmospheric volatile organic compounds can be subject to severe diffusion limitations in viscous organic aerosol particles. This may enable an important long-range transport mechanism for organic material, including pollutant molecules such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs).

Highlights

  • Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) emitted into the atmosphere can undergo gas-phase oxidation, lowering the volatility of some reaction products sufficiently to partition into the particle phase and form secondary organic aerosol (SOA)

  • We investigate the evaporation of PEG-4 from levitated sucrose aerosol particles, a viscous matrix used as an SOA proxy, as a function of relative humidity (RH) and temperature

  • Relying on the thermodynamic and kinetic properties of the ternary sucrose/PEG-4/water system characterized in this work, we explore a scenario in which an aerosol particle with radius r = 100 nm containing a small amount of a volatile organic species has been rapidly transported upwards through the troposphere, where it is mixed into a cold ambient air with RH = 38 % that is void of the dissolved volatile compound (i.e., PEG-4 partial pressure is zero)

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Summary

Introduction

Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) emitted into the atmosphere can undergo gas-phase oxidation, lowering the volatility of some reaction products sufficiently to partition into the particle phase and form secondary organic aerosol (SOA). As condensed-phase diffusivity is generally expected to be inversely related to viscosity, diffusion coefficients of water, organic molecules and oxidants are essential to understanding the influence of SOA physical state on aerosol processes. Slow diffusivities of organic molecules and oxidants can affect atmospheric chemistry, a point illustrated in a study by Davies and Wilson (2015), who observed the formation of interfacial gradients in the reactive uptake of OH radicals on viscous citric acid (CA) aerosol particles. We present quantitative diffusivity measurements of tetraethylene glycol (PEG-4), which is a volatile organic with a well-established vapor pressure representative of atmospheric SVOCs. We investigate the evaporation of PEG-4 from levitated sucrose aerosol particles, a viscous matrix used as an SOA proxy, as a function of RH and temperature. The diffusivities will be retrieved from experimental radius data using a radially resolved diffusion model

Experiment
Measurements
Processing of LED spectra
Diffusion model
Activity coefficients
Determination of diffusivities
Stokes–Einstein comparison
Atmospheric outlook
Conclusions
PEG-4 water activity
Density
Wilson activity coefficient parametrization
Diffusion activation energy
Full Text
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