Abstract
Liquid–liquid phase separation (LLPS) in aerosol particles is important for the climate system due to its potential to impact heterogeneous chemistry, cloud condensation nuclei, and new particle growth. Our group and others have shown a lower separation relative humidity for submicron particles, but whether the suppression is due to thermodynamics or kinetics is unclear. Herein, we characterize the experimental LLPS phase diagram of submicron 2-methylglutaric acid and ammonium sulfate aerosol particles and compare it to that of supermicron-sized particles. Surprisingly, as the equilibration time of submicron-sized aerosol particles was increased to 60 min, the experimental phase diagram converges with the results for supermicron-sized particles. Our findings indicate that nucleation kinetics are responsible for the observed lower separation relative humidities in submicron aerosol particles. Therefore, experiments and models that investigate atmospheric processes of Aitken and accumulation mode organic aerosol particles may need to consider the temporal evolution of aerosol LLPS.
Supplementary materials
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Supporting Information
Description
The content of this supporting information includes the size distribution of submicron 2MGA+AS particles, example optical images of micrometer droplets at different RH, the measured ERH of submicron inorganic aerosol particles and literature values (KCl, K2SO4), and the AIOMFAC prediction of the viscosity of 2MGA+AS aerosols.
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