Sea spray aerosol (SSA) particles were found to be diverse with respect to their molecular composition. The number distribution of the SSA particle ensemble, as defined by the molecular signatures in individual particles, shifted in response to changes in the activity of phytoplankton and bacteria in the seawater. This dynamic shift in the molecular composition of individual SSA particles changes their hygroscopicity, a key climate-relevant property. SUMMARYThe impact of sea spray aerosol (SSA) on climate depends on the size and chemical composition of individual particles that make up the total SSA ensemble. There remains a lack of understanding as to the composition of individual particles within the SSA ensemble and how it changes in response to dynamic ocean biology. Here, we characterize the classes of organic compounds as well as specific molecules within individual SSA particles. The diversity of molecules within the organic fraction was observed to vary between submicrometer-and supermicrometer-sized particles and included contributions from fatty acids, monosaccharides, polysaccharides, and siliceous material. Significant changes in this molecular diversity were observed to coincide with the rise and fall of phytoplankton and heterotrophic bacteria populations within the seawater. Furthermore, the water uptake of individual particles was affected, as learned from studying the hygroscopicity of model systems composed of representative mixtures of salts and organic compounds.
Understanding the interactions of water with atmospheric aerosols is crucial for determining the size, physical state, reactivity, and climate impacts of this important component of the Earth’s atmosphere. Here we show that water uptake and hygroscopic growth of multicomponent, atmospherically relevant particles can be size dependent when comparing 100 nm versus ca. 6 μm sized particles. It was determined that particles composed of ammonium sulfate with succinic acid and of a mixture of chlorides typical of the marine environment show size-dependent hygroscopic behavior. Microscopic analysis of the distribution of components within the aerosol particles show that the size dependence is due to differences in the mixing state, that is, whether particles are homogeneously mixed or phase separated, for different sized particles. This morphology-dependent hygroscopicity has consequences for heterogeneous atmospheric chemistry as well as aerosol interactions with electromagnetic radiation and clouds.
Organosulfates (OS) are important components of secondary organic aerosol (SOA) that have been identified in numerous field studies. This class of compounds within SOA can potentially affect aerosol physicochemical properties such as hygroscopicity because of their polar and hydrophilic nature as well as their low volatility. Currently, there is a dearth of information on how aerosol particles that contain OS interact with water vapor in the atmosphere. Herein we report a laboratory investigation on the hygroscopic properties of a structurally diverse set of OS salts at varying relative humidity (RH) using a Hygroscopicity-Tandem Differential Mobility Analyzer (H-TDMA). The OS studied include the potassium salts of glycolic acid sulfate, hydroxyacetone sulfate, 4-hydroxy-2,3-epoxybutane sulfate, and 2-butenediol sulfate and the sodium salts of benzyl sulfate, methyl sulfate, ethyl sulfate, and propyl sulfate. In addition, mixtures of OS and sodium chloride were also studied. The results showed gradual deliquescence of these aerosol particles characterized by continuous uptake and evaporation of water in both hydration and dehydration processes for the OS, while the mixture showed prompt deliquescence and effloresce transitions, albeit at a lower relative humidity relative to pure sodium chloride. Hygroscopic growth of these OS at 85% RH were also fit to parameterized functional forms. This new information provided here has important implications about the atmospheric lifetime, light scattering properties, and the role of OS in cloud formation. Moreover, results of these studies can ultimately serve as a basis for the development and evaluation of thermodynamic models for these compounds in order to consider their impact on the atmosphere.
Individual airborne sea spray aerosol (SSA) particles show diversity in their morphologies and water uptake properties that are highly dependent on the biological, chemical, and physical processes within the sea subsurface and the sea surface microlayer. In this study, hygroscopicity data for model systems of organic compounds of marine origin mixed with NaCl are compared to data for authentic SSA samples collected in an ocean-atmosphere facility providing insights into the SSA particle growth, phase transitions and interactions with water vapor in the atmosphere. In particular, we combine single particle morphology analyses using atomic force microscopy (AFM) with hygroscopic growth measurements in order to provide important insights into particle hygroscopicity and the surface microstructure. For model systems, a range of simple and complex carbohydrates were studied including glucose, maltose, sucrose, laminarin, sodium alginate, and lipopolysaccharides. The measured hygroscopic growth was compared with predictions from the Extended-Aerosol Inorganics Model (E-AIM). It is shown here that the E-AIM model describes well the deliquescence transition and hygroscopic growth at low mass ratios but not as well for high ratios, most likely due to a high organic volume fraction. AFM imaging reveals that the equilibrium morphology of these single-component organic particles is amorphous. When NaCl is mixed with the organics, the particles adopt a core-shell morphology with a cubic NaCl core and the organics forming a shell similar to what is observed for the authentic SSA samples. The observation of such core-shell morphologies is found to be highly dependent on the salt to organic ratio and varies depending on the nature and solubility of the organic component. Additionally, single particle organic volume fraction AFM analysis of NaCl : glucose and NaCl : laminarin mixtures shows that the ratio of salt to organics in solution does not correspond exactly for individual particles -showing diversity within the ensemble of particles produced even for a simple two component system. IntroductionCovering a substantial area of the Earth's surface, the ocean serves as one of the main sources of particulate matter in the atmosphere. Sea spray aerosols (SSAs) are generated by breaking waves in marine environments and account for the largest atmospheric aerosol flux. it has a profound influence on the composition of aerosol particles as they escape across the interface. The SSML is a rich mixture of organic compounds such as fatty acids, fatty alcohols, sterols, carbohydrates, proteins and more complex colloids and aggregates exuded by phytoplankton such as lipopolysaccharides (LPSs). 11,12In the authentic samples collected from a pristine region of the Pacific Ocean, Gagosian and coworkers 13 detected alcohols, fatty acid salts and esters as specific tracers of ocean-derived organic compounds in atmospheric aerosols. The organic compounds include saccharides, fatty acids, and a few other organic classes. 13 Progress in analytic...
Triboelectric nanogenerator could efficaciously harvest the mechanical energy that come from the ambient environment, which has become a research hotspot in the sphere of wearable electronic technology. Here, a self-powered and highly stretchable single-electrode triboelectric nanogenerator with an undulating three-dimensional surface crumpled structure is reported. The triboelectric nanogenerator has a multilayer structure with a crumpled nanofiber membrane as the triboelectric material. Due to the materials and structural innovations, the triboelectric nanogenerator possesses outstanding electric output stability and stretchability. It could subtly transform the unstretched flexible nanofiber membrane into a stretchable material, while overcoming the deficiency that the nanofiber membrane has a tendency to be delaminated from the electrode layer during long-term operation. Utilizing the triboelectric nanogenerator directly attached to human skin could efficaciously harvest the ignored mechanical energy that come from our daily activities.
ESI-MS and molecular dynamic calculations reveal that in the presence of K(+), Rb(+) and Cs(+), uracil, thymine and their homologues form self-assembled quintet structures that are stabilized by hydrogen bonding and ion dipole interactions.
Multistate empirical valence bond simulations were employed to study proton transport through gramicidin A channels embedded in two different lipid bilayers, glycerol 1-monooleate (GMO) and diphytanolphosphatidylcholine (DiPhPC). Free energy barriers to proton permeation were derived using a new internal reaction coordinate describing the proton permeation process. The large quantitative and qualitative differences between the two systems are discussed in terms of local bilayer structures, ordering of interfacial water, and channel flexibility in the two environments.
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