TY - JOUR
T1 - Partitioning of Ionic Surfactants in Aerosol Droplets Containing Glutaric Acid, Sodium Chloride, or Sea Salts
AU - Bain, Alison M
AU - Ghosh, Kunal
AU - Tumashevich, Konstantin
AU - Prisle, Nonne L.
AU - Bzdek, Bryan R
PY - 2025/3/12
Y1 - 2025/3/12
N2 - Sea spray is the largest contributor to atmospheric aerosol by mass and contains mixtures of inorganic salts and organics. The chemically complex organic fraction can contain soluble, highly surface-active organics, and field studies commonly identify ionic surfactants in aerosol samples. In macroscopic solutions, divalent cations present in sea spray can alter the partitioning of ionic surfactants. Furthermore, the high surface area-to-volume (SA-V) ratio of aerosol droplets may lead to depletion of surfactant from the bulk, requiring more surfactant, relative to its volume, to lower the surface tension of a droplet compared to a macroscopic solution. Here, we investigate the partitioning of model ionic surfactants (sodium dodecylsulfate, an anionic surfactant, and cert tetrammonium bromide, a cationic surfactant) in 6–10 μm radius droplets containing glutaric acid, NaCl, or sea spray mimic cosolutes. Surface tension measurements are compared to two independent partitioning models accounting for the SA-V ratio of the droplets. Salting out of the ionic surfactants leads to strong bulk depletion in 6–10 μm radius droplets, with no observable difference in droplet surface tension between NaCl and sea spray mimic cosolutes. The total ionic surfactant concentration required to reach the minimum surface tension for these droplets was 2.0 ± 0.5 mM, consistent with previous observations in droplets containing strong surfactants. Modelling results suggest that surfactant concentrations of the order 10s–100s mM are required to significantly reduce surface tension in 100 nm droplets. These results have implications for cloud droplet activation and chemistry occurring at the interface of sea spray aerosol.
AB - Sea spray is the largest contributor to atmospheric aerosol by mass and contains mixtures of inorganic salts and organics. The chemically complex organic fraction can contain soluble, highly surface-active organics, and field studies commonly identify ionic surfactants in aerosol samples. In macroscopic solutions, divalent cations present in sea spray can alter the partitioning of ionic surfactants. Furthermore, the high surface area-to-volume (SA-V) ratio of aerosol droplets may lead to depletion of surfactant from the bulk, requiring more surfactant, relative to its volume, to lower the surface tension of a droplet compared to a macroscopic solution. Here, we investigate the partitioning of model ionic surfactants (sodium dodecylsulfate, an anionic surfactant, and cert tetrammonium bromide, a cationic surfactant) in 6–10 μm radius droplets containing glutaric acid, NaCl, or sea spray mimic cosolutes. Surface tension measurements are compared to two independent partitioning models accounting for the SA-V ratio of the droplets. Salting out of the ionic surfactants leads to strong bulk depletion in 6–10 μm radius droplets, with no observable difference in droplet surface tension between NaCl and sea spray mimic cosolutes. The total ionic surfactant concentration required to reach the minimum surface tension for these droplets was 2.0 ± 0.5 mM, consistent with previous observations in droplets containing strong surfactants. Modelling results suggest that surfactant concentrations of the order 10s–100s mM are required to significantly reduce surface tension in 100 nm droplets. These results have implications for cloud droplet activation and chemistry occurring at the interface of sea spray aerosol.
M3 - Article (Academic Journal)
SN - 1680-7316
JO - Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
JF - Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
ER -