Literature DB >> 21568271

Freezing of water and aqueous NaCl droplets coated by organic monolayers as a function of surfactant properties and water activity.

Daniel A Knopf1, Seanna M Forrester.   

Abstract

This study presents heterogeneous ice nucleation from water and aqueous NaCl droplets coated by 1-nonadecanol and 1-nonadecanoic acid monolayers as a function of water activity (a(w)) from 0.8 to 1 accompanied by measurements of the corresponding pressure-area isotherms and equilibrium spreading pressures. For water and aqueous NaCl solutions of ~0-20 wt % in concentration, 1-nonadecanol exhibits a condensed phase, whereas the phase of 1-nonadecanoic acid changes from an expanded to a condensed state with increasing NaCl content of the aqueous subphase. 1-Nonadecanol-coated aqueous droplets exhibit the highest median freezing temperatures that can be described by a shift in a(w) of the ice melting curve by 0.098 according to the a(w)-based ice nucleation approach. This freezing curve represents a heterogeneous ice nucleation rate coefficient (J(het)) of 0.85 ± 0.30 cm(-2) s(-1). The median freezing temperatures of 1-nonadecanoic acid-coated aqueous droplets decrease less with increasing NaCl content compared to the homogeneous freezing temperatures. This trend in freezing temperature is best described by a linear function in a(w) and not by the a(w)-based ice nucleation approach most likely due to an increased ice nucleation efficiency of 1-nonadecanoic acid governed by the monolayer state. This freezing curve represents J(het) = 0.46 ± 0.16 cm(-2) s(-1). Contact angles (α) for 1-nonadecanol- and 1-nonadecanoic acid-coated aqueous droplets increase as temperature decreases for each droplet composition, but absolute values depend on employed water diffusivity and the interfacial energies of the ice embryo. A parametrization of log[J(het)(Δa(w))] is presented which allows prediction of freezing temperatures and heterogeneous ice nucleation rate coefficients for water and aqueous NaCl droplets coated by 1-nonadecanol without knowledge of the droplet's composition and α.

Entities:  

Year:  2011        PMID: 21568271     DOI: 10.1021/jp2014644

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Phys Chem A        ISSN: 1089-5639            Impact factor:   2.781


  4 in total

1.  Ice nucleation imaged with X-ray spectro-microscopy.

Authors:  Peter A Alpert; Anthony Boucly; Shuo Yang; Huanyu Yang; Kevin Kilchhofer; Zhaochu Luo; Celestino Padeste; Simone Finizio; Markus Ammann; Benjamin Watts
Journal:  Environ Sci Atmos       Date:  2022-02-07

2.  The enhancement and suppression of immersion mode heterogeneous ice-nucleation by solutes.

Authors:  Thomas F Whale; Mark A Holden; Theodore W Wilson; Daniel O'Sullivan; Benjamin J Murray
Journal:  Chem Sci       Date:  2018-03-27       Impact factor: 9.825

3.  The study of atmospheric ice-nucleating particles via microfluidically generated droplets.

Authors:  Mark D Tarn; Sebastien N F Sikora; Grace C E Porter; Daniel O'Sullivan; Mike Adams; Thomas F Whale; Alexander D Harrison; Jesús Vergara-Temprado; Theodore W Wilson; Jung-Uk Shim; Benjamin J Murray
Journal:  Microfluid Nanofluidics       Date:  2018-04-24       Impact factor: 2.529

4.  Stochastic nucleation processes and substrate abundance explain time-dependent freezing in supercooled droplets.

Authors:  Daniel A Knopf; Peter A Alpert; Assaf Zipori; Naama Reicher; Yinon Rudich
Journal:  NPJ Clim Atmos Sci       Date:  2020-01-17
  4 in total

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