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Evaporation of Ethanol/Water Droplets:  Examining the Temporal Evolution of Droplet Size, Composition and Temperature

The evolving size, composition, and temperature of evaporating ethanol/water aerosol droplets 25−57 μm in radius are probed by cavity enhanced Raman scattering (CERS) and laser induced fluorescence. This represents the first study in which the evolving composition of volatile droplets has been probe...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The journal of physical chemistry. A, Molecules, spectroscopy, kinetics, environment, & general theory Molecules, spectroscopy, kinetics, environment, & general theory, 2005-09, Vol.109 (35), p.7923-7931
Main Authors: Hopkins, Rebecca J, Reid, Jonathan P
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:The evolving size, composition, and temperature of evaporating ethanol/water aerosol droplets 25−57 μm in radius are probed by cavity enhanced Raman scattering (CERS) and laser induced fluorescence. This represents the first study in which the evolving composition of volatile droplets has been probed with spatial selectivity on the millisecond time scale, providing a new strategy for exploring mass and heat transfer in aerosols. The Raman scattering intensity is shown to depend exponentially on species concentration due to the stimulated nature of the CERS technique, providing a sensitive measure of the concentration of the volatile ethanol component. The accuracy with which we can determine droplet size, composition, and temperature is discussed. We demonstrate that the CERS measurements of evolving size and composition of droplets falling in a train can be used to characterize, and thus avoid, droplet coagulation. By varying the surrounding gas pressure (7−77 kPa), we investigate the dependence of the rate of evaporation on the rate of gas diffusion, and behavior consistent with gas diffusion-limited evaporation is observed. We suggest that such measurements can allow the determination of the vapor pressures of components within the droplet and can allow the determination of activity coefficients of volatile species.
ISSN:1089-5639
1520-5215
DOI:10.1021/jp0516543