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  4. Investigation of cloud condensation nuclei properties and droplet growth kinetics of the water-soluble aerosol fraction in Mexico City
 
research article

Investigation of cloud condensation nuclei properties and droplet growth kinetics of the water-soluble aerosol fraction in Mexico City

Padró, L. T.
•
Tkacik, D.
•
Lathem, T.
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2010
Journal of Geophysical Research Atmospheres

We present hygroscopic and cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) relevant properties of the water-soluble fraction of Mexico City aerosol collected upon filters during the 2006 Megacity Initiative: Local and Global Research Observations (MILAGRO) campaign. Application of κ-Kohler theory to the observed CCN activity gave a fairly constant hygroscopicity parameter (κ = 0.28 ± 0.06) regardless of location and organic fraction. Kohler theory analysis was used to understand this invariance by separating the molar volume and surfactant contributions to the CCN activity. Organics were found to depress surface tension (10-15%) from that of pure water. Daytime samples exhibited lower molar mass (∼200 amu) and surface tension depression than nighttime samples (∼400 amu); this is consistent with fresh hygroscopic secondary organic aerosol (SOA) condensing onto particles during peak photochemical hours, subsequently aging during nighttime periods of high relative humidity. Changes in surface tension partially compensate for shifts in average molar volume to give the constant hygroscopicity observed, which implies the amount (volume fraction) of soluble material in the parent aerosol is the key composition parameter required for CCN predictions. This finding, if applicable elsewhere, may explain why CCN predictions are often found to be insensitive to assumptions of chemical composition and provides a very simple way to parameterize organic hygroscopicity in atmospheric models (i.e., κ<inf>org</inf> = 0.28ε<inf>WSOC</inf>). Special care should be given, however, to surface tension depression from organic surfactants, as its nonlinear dependence with organic fraction may introduce biases in observed (and predicted) hygroscopicity. Finally, threshold droplet growth analysis suggests the water-soluble organics do not affect activation kinetics. Copyright © 2010 by the American Geophysical Union.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1029/2009JD013195
Author(s)
Padró, L. T.
Tkacik, D.
Lathem, T.
Hennigan, C. J.
Sullivan, A. P.
Weber, R. J.
Huey, L. G.
Nenes, Athanasios  
Date Issued

2010

Publisher

Blackwell Publishing Ltd

Published in
Journal of Geophysical Research Atmospheres
Volume

115

Issue

D9

Article Number

D09204

Subjects

Activation analysis

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Atmospheric aerosols

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Atmospheric composition

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Condensation

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Drop formation

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Forecasting

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Growth kinetics

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Surface active agents

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Surface chemistry

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Surface properties

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Surface tension

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Volume measurement

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Wetting

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Activation kinetics

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Atmospheric model

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Chemical compositions

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Cloud condensation nuclei

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Composition parameters

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Droplet growth

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Megacities

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Mexico City

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Molar volumes

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Nonlinear dependence

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Organic fractions

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Organic surfactants

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Organics

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Pure water

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Relative humidities

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Secondary organic aerosols

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Soluble materials

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Water soluble fraction

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Water-soluble organics

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Atmospheric humidity

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aerosol composition

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atmospheric circulation

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chemical composition

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cloud condensation nucleus

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cloud droplet

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cloud microphysics

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droplet

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growth curve

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hygroscopicity

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relative humidity

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spatiotemporal analysis

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surface tension

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surfactant

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Mexico [North America]

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
LAPI  
Available on Infoscience
October 15, 2018
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/149029
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