1 / 29

Coagulation

Coagulation. Reading: Chap 12. PbO-SiO 2 -PbSiO 3 composite. AEROSIL from Degussa, Inc. Q: How is rain droplet formed? Why is it larger in a thunderstorm? .

zuriel
Download Presentation

Coagulation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Coagulation Reading: Chap 12 PbO-SiO2-PbSiO3 composite AEROSIL from Degussa, Inc. Q: How is rain droplet formed? Why is it larger in a thunderstorm? Aerosol & Particulate Research Laboratory

  2. Definition: The process whereby aerosol particles collide with one another due to a relative motion between them and adhere to from larger particles • Thermal Coagulation: due to Brownian motion • Kinematic Coagulation: due to external forces Q: What are the possible external forces? Q: Any difference if solid or liquid particles coagulate? Agglomeration/Aggregation (if particles do not merge) Coalescence (sintering) Q: Do solid particles stay agglomerated? Q: What are the effects of coagulation on aerosol size distribution? Aerosol & Particulate Research Laboratory

  3. Collision Frequency Function(Population Balance) Rate of formation of size k particle Collision Frequency ni: number concentration of size i particle Q: What factors affect the frequency? Rate of removal of size k particle Net rate of size k particle Aerosol & Particulate Research Laboratory

  4. Brownian Coagulation Continuum regime b1,2 Free molecular regime dp1 Q: Any trend? What’s the physics behind it? Aerosol & Particulate Research Laboratory

  5. Nearly Monodisperse System Collision frequency function Coagulation equation Summing over all values of k Integrating once Aerosol & Particulate Research Laboratory

  6. Q: How do you know if coagulation is the main mechanism in your experimental system? Aerosol & Particulate Research Laboratory

  7. Q: How long does it take for N = 1012 #/cc to reduce to its half conc.? N = 106? Q: How to slow down coagulation? Q: If I have the final concentration and particle size, can I determine the original PSD if coagulation is the major mechanism? Aerosol & Particulate Research Laboratory

  8. Side note: Aging atmospheric aerosol also approaches asymptotic behavior: become more oxidized, less volatile and more hygroscopic Jimenez et al., Science, 2009, 326, 1525 Aerosol & Particulate Research Laboratory

  9. Coagulation of a Log-Normally Distributed Aerosol (t/coag) Q: How does N change wrt time? Q: What’s the impact of s0 on N? Aerosol & Particulate Research Laboratory

  10. Q: How does sg change wrt time? 2.5 0 = 2.5 2.0 2.0 g1.5 1.5 1.0 1.0 Q: Why does PM2.5 in Shanghai decrease when there is sand storm from Gobi desert? Aerosol & Particulate Research Laboratory

  11. Gas-To-Particle Conversion Reading: Chap 13.5 Q: What’s the interaction between gas molecules and particles? Activated Carbon VOC Water droplet Water vapor Q: Examples? ==>Condensation Q: How do we have the first particle for vapor condensation? ==>Nucleation Q: Examples? Aerosol & Particulate Research Laboratory

  12. (Saturation) Vapor Pressure Time to reach equilibrium How does vapor pressure change if the temperature increases? Vapor Pressure • The pressure required to maintain a vapor in equilibrium with the condensed vapor (liquid or solid) with a flat surface at a specified temperature Partial Pressure) Pv in mmHg and T in oC(if Table 9.2 is used) For water, A = 8.10765. B = 1,750.286, C = 235 Aerosol & Particulate Research Laboratory

  13. Saturation Ratio (or relative humidity for water) Supersaturation: S > 1 (RH > 100%) Q: What would happen if S > 1? Q: When does it happen for S > 1? Adiabatic Expansion, Mixing, Cooling, Speciation change by Gas Phase Reaction Aerosol & Particulate Research Laboratory

  14. Adiabatic Expansion An expansion allowing no heat input from the surroundings Q: Saturated water vapor @ 20 oC (p = 17.6 mmHg) expands 20%. Calculate the new saturation ratio. Ps @ 0 oC = 4.7 mmHg, k = 1.38. Example: Cloud formation, smoke generated in the neck of a wine bottle Aerosol & Particulate Research Laboratory

  15. Kelvin Effect Change in Gibbs free energy accompanying the formation of a single droplet of pure material A of radius Rp (initial) (final) NT: # of molecules Nu: # of vapor molecules Nl: # of liquid molecules gu: Gibbs free energy of a molecule in the vapor phase gl: Gibbs free energy of a molecule in the liquid phase ul: volume of one liquid molecule s: surface tension Rp: particle radius A system moves toward a lower energy state whenever possible. Aerosol & Particulate Research Laboratory

  16. Q: How does DG change as Rp increases? Aerosol & Particulate Research Laboratory

  17. Maximizing the G (Critical radius) (Critical Number) (Max G) (Kelvin Equation) (Kevin Ratio) The partial pressure of vapor at the surface of a small droplet is greater than the saturation vapor pressure defined for a flat surface Aerosol & Particulate Research Laboratory

  18. Critical number and Radius for water droplets Equilibrium vapor pressure over a pure water droplets for various dp at T = 298 K Aerosol & Particulate Research Laboratory

  19. Condensation Reading: Chap 13 • In the continuum regime, diffusion theory is used. At steady state Rate of diffusional condensation Volume growth Size growth Aerosol & Particulate Research Laboratory

  20. Q: How does the growth rate depend on particle volume? Particle size? Implication? Ex: For dp = 0. 1 and 1 mm, calculate the new dp after 1 sec of water vapor condensation at 20 oC. • In the free molecular regime, the gas kinetic theory is applied Volume growth Size growth Q: How can the condensation rate be increased? Q: How does the growth rate depend on size? Implication? Aerosol & Particulate Research Laboratory

  21. Condensation Nuclei Counter Q: How to measure N by light scattering intensity if dp is different? Q: Can we use CNC to measure dp? Q: What if we combine a DMA and a CNC? Aerosol & Particulate Research Laboratory

  22. Condensation with Soluble Nuclei & Ions Saturation ratio for droplets containing dissolved materials m: mass of the dissolved salt i: number of ions each molecule of salt forms Mw: molecular weight of solvent (water) Ms: molecular weight of salt : density of solvent Aerosol & Particulate Research Laboratory

  23. Saturation ratio vs droplet size for 10-16 g NaCl (Solid sphere of 0.045 mm in diameter) Aerosol & Particulate Research Laboratory

  24. Relative humidify vs droplet size (a larger scale) Droplet formation & crystalization 10-14g Q: Implication? Aerosol & Particulate Research Laboratory

  25. Evaporation • The reverse process of particle growth though there is no ciritical size. • Droplet lifetime/drying time Q: Where is droplet lifetime important? • For volatile materials, cooling of the droplet due to the latenet heat of evaporation needs to be considered. D = 0.24 cm2/s for water vapor R = 62400 mmHg·cm3/K·mol Droplet lifetime for dp > 1.0 mm Aerosol & Particulate Research Laboratory

  26. Aerosol & Particulate Research Laboratory

  27. Q: For a given aerosol system, what’s the effect of heating followed by cooling? Condensation Aerosol Generator Aerosol & Particulate Research Laboratory

  28. Summary Aerosol & Particulate Research Laboratory

  29. D = 0.24 cm2/s 1 = 3×10-23 cm3 k = 1.38×10-16dyne·cm/K T = 298 K p1 ̶ pd = 1.01×106 dyne/cm2 t = 1 s Aerosol & Particulate Research Laboratory

More Related