Publication | Closed Access
Infrared spectroscopy of sulfuric acid/water aerosols: Freezing characteristics
54
Citations
32
References
1997
Year
EngineeringPolar EnvironmentsSulfuric Acid/water AerosolsChemistryEarth ScienceEnvironmental ChemistryHigh Temperature AerosolAerosol TransportAtmospheric ScienceMicrometeorologyAerosol SamplingThermodynamicsAerosol FormationAtmospheric IcingInfrared SpectroscopyRadiation MeasurementCold ChemistryClimate DynamicsLow‐temperature Flow CellFourier TransformNatural SciencesSpectroscopy
A low‐temperature flow cell has been used in conjunction with a Fourier transform infrared (FT‐IR) spectrometer to study sulfuric acid/water aerosols. The aerosols were generated with a wide range of composition (28 to 85 wt%), including those characteristic of stratospheric sulfate aerosols, and studied over the temperature range from 240 K to 160 K. The particles exhibited deep supercooling, by as much as 100 K below the freezing point in some cases. Freezing of water ice was observed in the more dilute (<40 wt% sulfuric acid) particles, in agreement with the predictions of Jensen et al. and recent observations by Bertram et al. In contrast with theoretical predictions, however, the entire particle often does not immediately freeze, at least on the timescale of the present experiments (seconds to minutes). Freezing of the entire particle is observed at lower temperatures, well below that characteristic of the polar stratosphere.
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