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Published October 3, 2001 | public
Journal Article

On the Hygroscopic Behavior of Atmospheric Organic Aerosols

Abstract

The vapor−liquid equilibrium of organic species and water determines the partitioning of volatile organic species between the gas and aerosol phases in the atmosphere. Essential properties that govern this partitioning are the compounds' vapor pressures and the liquid-phase activity coefficients of the organic species. Key issues include (1) the amount of water absorbed by organic particles, both single-component and multicomponent, as a function of relative humidity and (2) how organic and water partitioning is altered as the relative humidity changes, for a fixed total (gas plus particle) quantity of each organic component. We present here calculations relating to each of these issues for organic molecules that are characteristic of those that have been identified in ambient aerosols. Uncertainties exist in knowledge of vapor pressures of atmospheric organics and in activity coefficients, which are calculated by the UNIFAC method. These uncertainties, the level of which is difficult to estimate because of a lack of appropriate thermodynamic data, can lead to significant uncertainty in predicted gas−aerosol partitioning. Current theories for estimating both vapor pressures and activity coefficients are likely to be improved eventually, but the methods discussed here will probably remain the procedures of choice for the immediate future.

Additional Information

© 2001 American Chemical Society. Publication Date (Web): April 7, 2001. We thank Mark Bartelt and the Hewlett-Packard V-Class Systems support staff at the Caltech Center for Advanced Computing Research for the use of their systems and the Numerical Algorithms Group software package. We also thank Simon L. Clegg and Samuel H. Yalkowsky for useful discussions and suggestions. Funding for this work was provided by the Electric Power Research Institute.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 25, 2023