Chemical Differences in Environmental Films Collected on Surfaces with Different Hydrophilicity

IF 2.9 3区 化学 Q2 CHEMISTRY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Jessica L. DeYoung, Uchechukwu Grace Akporere, Zezhen Cheng, Swarup China, Gregory W. Vandergrift, Christopher R. Anderton, Yadong Zhou, Zihua Zhu and Scott K. Shaw*, 
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Environmental films form when airborne particles and molecular species adsorb on solid surfaces. Recent studies have characterized these films but overlook how collection methods and host-surface character (orientation, chemical functionality, or height) change the deposition process. In this work, environmental films are collected at a rural location on gold and silicon surfaces (water contact angles of ca. 57° and <1°, respectively) to determine how the different substrate changes the properties of the accumulated environmental film. Results show that gold surfaces have a homogeneous distribution of film mass across the surface, while silicon surfaces collect films with irregular patchy domains. The two surfaces also develop different surface coverages and particle number densities, and the particles’ packing arrangements are quantified by analyzing nearest-neighbor distances. Computer-controlled scanning electron microscopy with energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy suggests that, despite morphological differences, larger (>5 μm) particles have similar elemental compositions. Minor variations are observed at smaller particle sizes (∼5 μm), which include carbon-rich particles primarily attributed to pollen or biotic activity. Chemical analysis shows the presence of nitrate and sulfate, as well as heterogeneous cation pools on the surfaces.

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来源期刊
ACS Earth and Space Chemistry
ACS Earth and Space Chemistry Earth and Planetary Sciences-Geochemistry and Petrology
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
11.80%
发文量
249
期刊介绍: The scope of ACS Earth and Space Chemistry includes the application of analytical, experimental and theoretical chemistry to investigate research questions relevant to the Earth and Space. The journal encompasses the highly interdisciplinary nature of research in this area, while emphasizing chemistry and chemical research tools as the unifying theme. The journal publishes broadly in the domains of high- and low-temperature geochemistry, atmospheric chemistry, marine chemistry, planetary chemistry, astrochemistry, and analytical geochemistry. ACS Earth and Space Chemistry publishes Articles, Letters, Reviews, and Features to provide flexible formats to readily communicate all aspects of research in these fields.
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