1. Interpreting activity in H2O–H2SO4 binary nucleation
- Author
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Anthony S. Wexler and Keith J. Bein
- Subjects
Models, Statistical ,Number density ,Chemistry, Physical ,Chemistry ,Temperature ,Nucleation ,Water ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Perturbation (astronomy) ,Thermodynamics ,Humidity ,Sulfuric Acids ,Mole fraction ,Kinetics ,Atmospheric chemistry ,Cloud condensation nuclei ,Gases ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Perturbation theory ,Hydrate - Abstract
Sulfuric acid-water nucleation is thought to be a key atmospheric mechanism for forming new condensation nuclei. In earlier literature, measurements of sulfuric acid activity were interpreted as the total (monomer plus hydrate) concentration above solution. Due to recent reinterpretations, most literature values for H(2)SO(4) activity are thought to represent the number density of monomers. Based on this reinterpretation, the current work uses the most recent models of H(2)O-H(2)SO(4) binary nucleation along with perturbation analyses to predict a decrease in critical cluster mole fraction, increase in critical cluster diameter, and orders of magnitude decrease in nucleation rate. Nucleation rate parameterizations available in the literature, however, give opposite trends. To resolve these discrepancies, nucleation rates were calculated for both interpretations of H(2)SO(4) activity and directly compared to the available parameterizations as well as the perturbation analysis. Results were in excellent agreement with older parameterizations that assumed H(2)SO(4) activity represents the total concentration and duplicated the predicted trends from the perturbation analysis, but differed by orders of magnitude from more recent parameterizations that assume H(2)SO(4) activity represents only the monomer. Comparison with experimental measurements available in the literature revealed that the calculations of the current work assuming a(a) represents the total concentration are most frequently in agreement with observations.
- Published
- 2007
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