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Direct Measurement of Photoacoustic Signal Sensitivity to Aerosol Particle Size.

Johannes W CremerPaul A CovertEvelyne A ParmentierRuth Signorell
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2017)
Continuing efforts to quantify the influence of aerosol light absorption upon global heat budgets rely on high-quality measurements of aerosol optical properties. Of the available methods, photoacoustic spectroscopy stands out as a sensitive method for measurements of aerosol absorption with minimal sample modification. Theoretical treatments of photoacoustic aerosol detection have predicted size-dependent damping of the photoacoustic signal as a result of particle thermal inertia. We provide experimental confirmation of this prediction using a single-particle photoacoustic spectrometer, which allows us to measure photoacoustic signals with high sensitivity and size-specificity. Both the magnitude and phase of the photoacoustic response follow the linearized description of the heat flux. The quantification of this effect provides a basis for future, system-specific case studies.
Keyphrases
  • fluorescence imaging
  • water soluble
  • high resolution
  • heat stress
  • mass spectrometry
  • current status
  • label free