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Effect of Drying Rate on Aerosol Particle Morphology.

Muhammad Bilal AltafMiriam Arak Freedman
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2017)
The morphology of aerosol particles impacts their role in the climate system. In the submicron size regime, the morphology of particles that undergo liquid-liquid phase separation is dependent on their size, where for some systems small particles are homogeneous and large particles are phase-separated. We use cryogenic transmission electron microscopy to probe the morphology of model organic aerosol systems. We observe that the transition region (where both homogeneous and phase-separated morphologies are seen) spans 121 nm at the fastest drying rates with a midpoint diameter > 170 nm. By slowing the drying rate over several orders of magnitude, the transition region shifts to smaller diameters (midpoint < 40 nm) and the width narrows to 4 nm. Our results suggest that the size-dependent morphology originates from an underlying finite size effect, rather than solely kinetics, due to the presence of a size dependence even at the slowest drying rates.
Keyphrases
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