American Association for Aerosol Research - Abstract Submission

AAAR 38th Annual Conference
October 5 - October 9, 2020

Virtual Conference

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Modification of a Water-based Condensation Particle Counter to Rapidly Measure Sub 3 Nanometer Atmospheric Clusters through Pulse Height Analysis: Laboratory and Field Measurements

CHONGAI KUANG, Darielle Dexheimer, Brookhaven National Laboratory

     Abstract Number: 407
     Working Group: Instrumentation and Methods

Abstract
Atmospheric particle nucleation is an important environmental nano-scale process, with field measurements and modeling studies indicating that freshly nucleated particles can contribute significantly to the global population of aerosol and cloud condensation nuclei. Our understanding of atmospheric nucleation and its influence on climate, however, is limited, as few ambient measurements have been made of either the nucleation rate or the chemical composition of the freshly formed clusters, both of which are necessary to gain process-level understanding. Recent advances in the development of condensation particle counters (CPCs) have enabled the detection of gas-phase single molecules and molecular clusters down to 1 nanometer in diameter and below using new working fluids and modified operating conditions. This new capability has enabled the direct measurement of aerosol nucleation from trace-gas precursors in both laboratory experiments and the ambient environment, providing information necessary to understand and constrain the nucleation mechanism. While there have been an increasing number of atmospheric cluster measurements from surface-based platforms, there have been very few measurements of the vertically-resolved ambient cluster size distribution from aerial platforms, which are needed to connect atmospheric nucleation with large-scale boundary layer transport processes and properties. To address this measurement need, a light-weight, compact, and battery-operated commercial water-based CPC has been modified to rapidly measure (~ 1 Hz sampling time resolution) the cluster size distribution (< 3 nanometers) through pulse height analysis. Characterizations of the modified CPC size-dependent counting efficiency and analysis of the resulting droplet size spectra to recover the sampled aerosol size distribution will be presented using high resolution electrical mobility classified ammonium sulfate aerosol. Vertically-resolved nanoparticle measurements obtained from deploying the modified water CPC on a tethered balloon system will be also be presented.