Meredith Schervish, Neil M Donahue, Manabu Shiraiwa
{"title":"挥发性、粘度和非理想性对二次有机气溶胶颗粒-颗粒混合时间尺度的影响","authors":"Meredith Schervish, Neil M Donahue, Manabu Shiraiwa","doi":"10.1080/02786826.2023.2256827","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Different populations of aerosol are constantly mixed throughout the atmosphere. Large-scale models often assume no particle–particle mixing or fast mixing among aerosol populations, so that they stay externally mixed or instantaneously form internal mixtures. We apply the kinetic multilayer model of gas–particle interactions (KM-GAP) to simulate the evaporation of semi-volatile species from one particle population and partitioning into another population with various phase states and nonideal mixing conditions. We find that the particle–particle mixing timescale (τmix) is prolonged when the semi-volatile species transport to a population in which it is miscible, as more mass must be transported. Extremes of volatility prolong the τmix, as low-volatility species evaporate slowly, while high-volatility species condense slowly. When the bulk diffusivities of the two populations are greater than 10−15 cm2 s−1, semi-volatile species mix rapidly; otherwise, the τmix can be prolonged beyond 1 h. We apply KM-GAP to particle–particle mixing experiments of H-toluene SOA into D-toluene SOA and limonene SOA, showing that τmix is prolonged when toluene SOA is highly viscous, while initial partitioning of gas phase semi-volatile species from toluene SOA into limonene SOA is rapid because of the low viscosity of limonene SOA. Simulations of mixing toluene SOA and β-caryophyllene SOA indicate that the apparent discrepancy of limited mixing under conditions where both are predicted to have low viscosity are explained by limited miscibility of the semi-volatile components. Our study demonstrates that particle–particle mixing timescales are affected by a complex interplay among volatility, diffusion limitations, and non-ideal miscibility.","PeriodicalId":7474,"journal":{"name":"Aerosol Science and Technology","volume":"1 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":2.8000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-26","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Effects of volatility, viscosity, and non-ideality on particle–particle mixing timescales of secondary organic aerosols\",\"authors\":\"Meredith Schervish, Neil M Donahue, Manabu Shiraiwa\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/02786826.2023.2256827\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Different populations of aerosol are constantly mixed throughout the atmosphere. Large-scale models often assume no particle–particle mixing or fast mixing among aerosol populations, so that they stay externally mixed or instantaneously form internal mixtures. We apply the kinetic multilayer model of gas–particle interactions (KM-GAP) to simulate the evaporation of semi-volatile species from one particle population and partitioning into another population with various phase states and nonideal mixing conditions. We find that the particle–particle mixing timescale (τmix) is prolonged when the semi-volatile species transport to a population in which it is miscible, as more mass must be transported. Extremes of volatility prolong the τmix, as low-volatility species evaporate slowly, while high-volatility species condense slowly. When the bulk diffusivities of the two populations are greater than 10−15 cm2 s−1, semi-volatile species mix rapidly; otherwise, the τmix can be prolonged beyond 1 h. We apply KM-GAP to particle–particle mixing experiments of H-toluene SOA into D-toluene SOA and limonene SOA, showing that τmix is prolonged when toluene SOA is highly viscous, while initial partitioning of gas phase semi-volatile species from toluene SOA into limonene SOA is rapid because of the low viscosity of limonene SOA. Simulations of mixing toluene SOA and β-caryophyllene SOA indicate that the apparent discrepancy of limited mixing under conditions where both are predicted to have low viscosity are explained by limited miscibility of the semi-volatile components. 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Effects of volatility, viscosity, and non-ideality on particle–particle mixing timescales of secondary organic aerosols
Different populations of aerosol are constantly mixed throughout the atmosphere. Large-scale models often assume no particle–particle mixing or fast mixing among aerosol populations, so that they stay externally mixed or instantaneously form internal mixtures. We apply the kinetic multilayer model of gas–particle interactions (KM-GAP) to simulate the evaporation of semi-volatile species from one particle population and partitioning into another population with various phase states and nonideal mixing conditions. We find that the particle–particle mixing timescale (τmix) is prolonged when the semi-volatile species transport to a population in which it is miscible, as more mass must be transported. Extremes of volatility prolong the τmix, as low-volatility species evaporate slowly, while high-volatility species condense slowly. When the bulk diffusivities of the two populations are greater than 10−15 cm2 s−1, semi-volatile species mix rapidly; otherwise, the τmix can be prolonged beyond 1 h. We apply KM-GAP to particle–particle mixing experiments of H-toluene SOA into D-toluene SOA and limonene SOA, showing that τmix is prolonged when toluene SOA is highly viscous, while initial partitioning of gas phase semi-volatile species from toluene SOA into limonene SOA is rapid because of the low viscosity of limonene SOA. Simulations of mixing toluene SOA and β-caryophyllene SOA indicate that the apparent discrepancy of limited mixing under conditions where both are predicted to have low viscosity are explained by limited miscibility of the semi-volatile components. Our study demonstrates that particle–particle mixing timescales are affected by a complex interplay among volatility, diffusion limitations, and non-ideal miscibility.
期刊介绍:
Aerosol Science and Technology publishes theoretical, numerical and experimental investigations papers that advance knowledge of aerosols and facilitate its application. Articles on either basic or applied work are suitable. Examples of topics include instrumentation for the measurement of aerosol physical, optical, chemical and biological properties; aerosol dynamics and transport phenomena; numerical modeling; charging; nucleation; nanoparticles and nanotechnology; lung deposition and health effects; filtration; and aerosol generation.
Consistent with the criteria given above, papers that deal with the atmosphere, climate change, indoor and workplace environments, homeland security, pharmaceutical aerosols, combustion sources, aerosol synthesis reactors, and contamination control in semiconductor manufacturing will be considered. AST normally does not consider papers that describe routine measurements or models for aerosol air quality assessment.