Abstract

Abstract. Surface-active compounds present in aerosols can increase their cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) activation efficiency by reducing the surface tension (σ) in the growing droplets. However, the importance of this effect is poorly constrained by measurements. Here we present estimates of droplet surface tension near the point of activation derived from direct measurement of droplet diameters using a continuous flow streamwise thermal gradient chamber (CFSTGC). The experiments used sea spray aerosol (SSA) mimics composed of NaCl coated by varying amounts of (i) oleic acid, palmitic acid or myristic acid, (ii) mixtures of palmitic acid and oleic acid, and (iii) oxidized oleic acid. Significant reductions in σ relative to that for pure water were observed for these mimics at relative humidity (RH) near activation (∼ 99.9 %) when the coating was sufficiently thick. The calculated surface pressure (π = σH2O − σobserved) values for a given organic compound or mixture collapse onto one curve when plotted as a function of molecular area for different NaCl seed sizes and measured RH. The observed critical molecular area (A0) for oleic acid determined from droplet growth was similar to that from experiments conducted using macroscopic solutions in a Langmuir trough. However, the observations presented here suggest that oleic acid in microscopic droplets may exhibit larger π values during monolayer compression. For myristic acid, the observed A0 compared well to macroscopic experiments on a fresh subphase, for which dissolution has an important impact. A significant kinetic limitation to water uptake was observed for NaCl particles coated with pure palmitic acid, likely as a result of palmitic acid (with coating thicknesses ranging from 67 to 132 nm) being able to form a solid film. However, for binary palmitic-acid–oleic-acid mixtures there was no evidence of a kinetic limitation to water uptake. Oxidation of oleic acid had a minor impact on the magnitude of the surface tension reductions observed, potentially leading to a slight reduction in the effect compared to pure oleic acid. A CCN counter was also used to assess the impact on critical supersaturations of the substantial σ reductions observed at very high RH. For the fatty-acid-coated NaCl particles, when the organic fraction (εorg) was > 0.90 small depressions in critical supersaturation were observed. However, when εorg < 0.90 the impact on critical supersaturation was negligible. Thus, for the fatty acids considered here, the substantial σ reductions observed at high RH values just below activation have limited impact on the ultimate critical supersaturation. A surface film model is used to establish the properties that surface-active organic molecules must have if they are to ultimately have a substantial impact on the activation efficiency of SSA. To influence activation, the average properties of surface-active marine-derived organic molecules must differ substantially from the long-chain fatty acids examined, having either smaller molecular volumes or larger molecular areas. The model results also indicate that organic-compound-driven surface tension depression can serve to buffer the critical supersaturation against changes to the organic-to-salt ratio in particles in which the organic fraction is sufficiently large.

Highlights

  • Surface-active organic matter present in atmospheric aerosols has received considerable attention given its important role in heterogeneous chemistry (Knopf et al, 2005; Shaloski et al, 2017), aerosol water uptake and evaporation (Davies et al, 2013), and potential impact on the ability of particles to activate into cloud droplets (Ruehl et al, 2016; Ovadnevaite et al, 2017)

  • To better understand the impact of surface-active organic species on sea spray aerosol (SSA) particle activation efficiency, and on droplet activation in general, we report on measurements of droplet sizes at relative humidity (RH) values just below activation for NaCl particles coated with varying amounts of marine-relevant organic compounds, long-chain fatty acids

  • −6 a Uncertainties on the film model fit parameters were estimated by performing separate fits after perturbing the input RH based on the precision-based uncertainty in the RH. b These experiments were conducted only at one εorg and the data are too limited for application of the film model. c No minimum surface tension was reached for this experiment. d From Ruehl et al (2016). %The oleic acid fractions for this coating were variable

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Summary

Introduction

Surface-active organic matter present in atmospheric aerosols has received considerable attention given its important role in heterogeneous chemistry (Knopf et al, 2005; Shaloski et al, 2017), aerosol water uptake and evaporation (Davies et al, 2013), and potential impact on the ability of particles to activate into cloud droplets (Ruehl et al, 2016; Ovadnevaite et al, 2017). To better understand the impact of surface-active organic species on SSA particle activation efficiency, and on droplet activation in general, we report on measurements of droplet sizes at RH values just below activation for NaCl particles coated with varying amounts of marine-relevant organic compounds, long-chain fatty acids. Since particles in the ambient atmosphere are composed of complex mixtures of organic species, the role of mixtures was investigated by comparing singlecomponent and binary surfactant systems and by comparing oxidized and unoxidized systems These measurements were used to estimate the surface tension of the droplets as a function of the relative abundances of NaCl and the organic component(s) at a given RH, or as a function of RH for a fixed dry particle composition. We connect these near-activation surface tension measurements to the surface tension estimated at activation with a traditional CCN counter to assess whether the observed reductions in surface tension significantly affect critical supersaturations for these chemical systems

Particle generation and processing
Hygroscopicity measurements
Size and composition
Upper-limit surface pressure calculation
Surface and bulk partitioning
Oleic acid coatings
Myristic acid coatings
Palmitic acid coatings
Binary surfactant systems
Köhler curves and the surface tension at activation
Oxidation experiments
Sensitivity to film model parameters
Linking to sea spray and secondary marine aerosol
Conclusion
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