Low temperature growth of sub 10 nm particles by ammonium nitrate condensation
- Creators
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Donahue, Neil M.1
- Xiao, Mao2
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Marten, Ruby2
- Wang, Mingyi1, 3
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Kong, Weimeng4
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Schervish, Meredith1, 5
- Ye, Qing1
- Hofbauer, Victoria1
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Dada, Lubna2
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Duplissy, Jonathan6
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Finkenzeller, Henning6
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Gordon, Hamish1
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Kirkby, Jasper7, 8
- Lamkaddam, Houssni2
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Makhmutov, Vladimir9
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Philippov, Maxim9
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Rörup, Birte6
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Volkamer, Rainer10
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Wang, Dongyu2
- Weber, Stefan K.8
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Flagan, Richard C.4
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Stolzenburg, Dominik11
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El Hadad, Imad2
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1.
Carnegie Mellon University
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2.
Paul Scherrer Institute
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3.
University of Chicago
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4.
California Institute of Technology
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5.
University of California, Irvine
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6.
University of Helsinki
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7.
Goethe University Frankfurt
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8.
European Organization for Nuclear Research
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9.
P.N. Lebedev Physical Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences
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10.
University of Colorado Boulder
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11.
TU Wien
Abstract
Co-condensation of nitric acid and ammonia vapors to form ammonium nitrate transforms from a fully semi-volatile behavior when it is relatively warm (273 K and above, typical of the seasonal planetary boundary layer) into effectively non-volatile and irreversible uptake for the limiting vapor when it is cold (well below 273 K, typical of the upper troposphere and occasionally the wintertime boundary layer). This causes the system to switch in character from the one governed by semi-volatile equilibrium (how it is usually portrayed) to the one governed by irreversible reactive uptake to even the smallest particles. Uptake involves an activation diameter, which can be as small as 1 nm for typical vapor concentrations, and subsequent growth rates can be very high, exceeding 1000 nm h−1. In addition to this somewhat surprising behavior, the system provides an exemplary case for semi-volatile reactive uptake within the context of volatility and saturation ratios.
Copyright and License
© The Royal Society of Chemistry 2025. Open access, CC-BY.
Acknowledgement
This work was supported by Grant AGS2132089 from the U.S. National Science Foundation; the Vienna Science and Technology Fund (WWF) through project VRG22-003; grant 200021_213071 and PZ00P2_216181 from the Swiss National Science Fund.
Contributions
NMD conceived the project and designed the overall scope. MX inspired the framework and wrote an initial version of the dynamical model. NMD wrote the manuscript along with DS and IEH, with editorial input from all coauthors.
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Additional details
- National Science Foundation
- AGS2132089
- Vienna Science and Technology Fund
- VRG22-003
- Swiss National Science Foundation
- 200021_213071
- Swiss National Science Foundation
- PZ00P2_216181
- Accepted
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2024-10-19Accepted
- Available
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2024-10-21Published online
- Publication Status
- Published