Quantifying surface tension of metastable aerosols via electrodeformation

Abstract Accurate surface tension measurements are key to understanding and predicting the behavior of atmospheric aerosols, particularly their formation, growth, and phase transitions. In Earth’s atmosphere, aerosols often exist in metastable states, such as being supercooled or supersaturated. Sta...

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Main Authors: Vahid Shahabadi, Benjamin Vennes, Ryan Schmedding, Andreas Zuend, Janine Mauzeroll, Steen B. Schougaard, Thomas C. Preston
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Portfolio 2024-12-01
Series:Nature Communications
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-54106-3
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author Vahid Shahabadi
Benjamin Vennes
Ryan Schmedding
Andreas Zuend
Janine Mauzeroll
Steen B. Schougaard
Thomas C. Preston
author_facet Vahid Shahabadi
Benjamin Vennes
Ryan Schmedding
Andreas Zuend
Janine Mauzeroll
Steen B. Schougaard
Thomas C. Preston
author_sort Vahid Shahabadi
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Accurate surface tension measurements are key to understanding and predicting the behavior of atmospheric aerosols, particularly their formation, growth, and phase transitions. In Earth’s atmosphere, aerosols often exist in metastable states, such as being supercooled or supersaturated. Standard tensiometry instruments face challenges in accessing these states due to the large sample volumes they require and rapid phase changes near surfaces. We present an instrument that uses a strong electric field, nearing the dielectric strength of air, to deform aerosol microdroplets and measure surface tension in a contact-free, humidity-controlled environment. A dual-beam optical trap holds single microdroplets between two electrodes and excites Raman scattering. When a high voltage is applied, droplet deformations reach tens of nanometers. These small shape changes are precisely measured through the splitting of morphology-dependent resonances, seen as sharp peaks in Raman spectra. Our measurements cover water activities where droplets are supersaturated, a region with limited previous data, and show good agreement with existing data where comparisons are possible. Unlike prior levitation-based methods, this approach measures surface tension in systems with viscosities over 102 Pa s without relying on dynamic processes.
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institution OA Journals
issn 2041-1723
language English
publishDate 2024-12-01
publisher Nature Portfolio
record_format Article
series Nature Communications
spelling doaj-art-ebeb1ba028e24723841cae5d84a176082025-08-20T02:20:44ZengNature PortfolioNature Communications2041-17232024-12-0115111110.1038/s41467-024-54106-3Quantifying surface tension of metastable aerosols via electrodeformationVahid Shahabadi0Benjamin Vennes1Ryan Schmedding2Andreas Zuend3Janine Mauzeroll4Steen B. Schougaard5Thomas C. Preston6Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, McGill UniversityDepartment of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, McGill UniversityDepartment of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, McGill UniversityDepartment of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, McGill UniversityDepartment of Chemistry, McGill UniversityNanoQAM and Department of Chemistry, Université du Québec à MontréalDepartment of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, McGill UniversityAbstract Accurate surface tension measurements are key to understanding and predicting the behavior of atmospheric aerosols, particularly their formation, growth, and phase transitions. In Earth’s atmosphere, aerosols often exist in metastable states, such as being supercooled or supersaturated. Standard tensiometry instruments face challenges in accessing these states due to the large sample volumes they require and rapid phase changes near surfaces. We present an instrument that uses a strong electric field, nearing the dielectric strength of air, to deform aerosol microdroplets and measure surface tension in a contact-free, humidity-controlled environment. A dual-beam optical trap holds single microdroplets between two electrodes and excites Raman scattering. When a high voltage is applied, droplet deformations reach tens of nanometers. These small shape changes are precisely measured through the splitting of morphology-dependent resonances, seen as sharp peaks in Raman spectra. Our measurements cover water activities where droplets are supersaturated, a region with limited previous data, and show good agreement with existing data where comparisons are possible. Unlike prior levitation-based methods, this approach measures surface tension in systems with viscosities over 102 Pa s without relying on dynamic processes.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-54106-3
spellingShingle Vahid Shahabadi
Benjamin Vennes
Ryan Schmedding
Andreas Zuend
Janine Mauzeroll
Steen B. Schougaard
Thomas C. Preston
Quantifying surface tension of metastable aerosols via electrodeformation
Nature Communications
title Quantifying surface tension of metastable aerosols via electrodeformation
title_full Quantifying surface tension of metastable aerosols via electrodeformation
title_fullStr Quantifying surface tension of metastable aerosols via electrodeformation
title_full_unstemmed Quantifying surface tension of metastable aerosols via electrodeformation
title_short Quantifying surface tension of metastable aerosols via electrodeformation
title_sort quantifying surface tension of metastable aerosols via electrodeformation
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-54106-3
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