| Literature DB >> 28518073 |
Barbara Nozière1, Violaine Gérard2, Christine Baduel3, Corinne Ferronato2.
Abstract
Surface-active compounds, or surfactants, present in atmospheric aerosols are expected to play important roles in the formation of liquid water clouds in the Earth's atmosphere, a central process in meteorology, hydrology, and for the climate system. But because specific extraction and characterization of these compounds have been lacking for decades, very little is known on their identity, properties, mode of action and origins, thus preventing the full understanding of cloud formation and its potential links with the Earth's ecosystems. In this paper we present recently developed methods for 1) the targeted extraction of all the surfactants from atmospheric aerosol samples and for the determination of 2) their absolute concentrations in the aerosol phase and 3) their static surface tension curves in water, including their Critical Micelle Concentration (CMC). These methods have been validated with 9 references surfactants, including anionic, cationic and non-ionic ones. Examples of results are presented for surfactants found in fine aerosol particles (diameter <1 μm) collected at a coastal site in Croatia and suggestions for future improvements and other characterizations than those presented are discussed.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28518073 PMCID: PMC5565068 DOI: 10.3791/55622
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Vis Exp ISSN: 1940-087X Impact factor: 1.355


|
|
|
| To be used directly without pre-treatment and discarded after use. | |
| Wash with ethanol (only for the vials used for the colorimetric method). | |
| Rinse sequentially with tap water, ethanol, tap water, and ultrapure water. | |
| Fill the glass vials and beaker containing the corks, magnetic stirrers, and SPE tubes with ultrapure water and place them in an ultrasonic bath for 15 min. | |
| Remove the water and rinse with ultrapure water. | |
| Dry the glassware in air at room temperature. | |
| Once dried, close all bottles and store them under cover to avoid dust collection. | |
| To avoid contamination, use distinct glassware for the water extraction and the colorimetric method. | |
|
| Wash with ethanol and then ultrapure water. |
| Dry with compressed air. | |
|
| Wash with tap water and a brush and then with ethanol. |
| Rinse with tap water and then ultrapure water. | |
| Dry in air at room temperature. | |
| Once dried, close the boxes and store them under cover to avoid dust collection. | |
|
| Wash with ethanol and then ultrapure water. |
| Dry with compressed air. | |
|
| Wash with ethanol and rinse with tap water and then ultrapure water. |
| Dry with compressed air. |