scholarly journals A parallelized tool to calculate the electrical mobility of charged aerosol nanoparticles and ions in the gas phase

2020 ◽  
Vol 147 ◽  
pp. 105570 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joshua Coots ◽  
Viraj Gandhi ◽  
Tunde Onakoya ◽  
Xi Chen ◽  
Carlos Larriba-Andaluz
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Glenn Fugate ◽  
Jason Richards ◽  
Joshua Hubbard ◽  
Mengdawn Cheng

2015 ◽  
Vol 88 ◽  
pp. 90-97 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hoseop Choi ◽  
Seunghyon Kang ◽  
Wooik Jung ◽  
Yoon-ho Jung ◽  
Sei Jin Park ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. eaax9051 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael J. Lawler ◽  
Danielle C. Draper ◽  
James N. Smith

Aerosol nanoparticles play an important role in the climate system by affecting cloud formation and properties, as well as in human health because of their deep reach into lungs and the circulatory system. Determining nanoparticle sources and composition is a major challenge in assessing their impacts in these areas. The sudden appearance of large numbers of atmospheric nanoparticles is commonly attributed to secondary formation from gas-phase precursors, but in many cases, the evidence for this is equivocal. We report the detection of a mode of fungal fragments with a mobility diameter of roughly 30 nm released in episodic bursts in ambient air over an agricultural area in northern Oklahoma. These events reached concentrations orders of magnitude higher than other reports of biological particles and show similarities to unclarified events reported previously in the Amazon. These particles potentially represent a large source of both cloud-forming ice nuclei and respirable allergens in a variety of ecosystems.


Author(s):  
Richard E. Hartman ◽  
Roberta S. Hartman ◽  
Peter L. Ramos

The action of water and the electron beam on organic specimens in the electron microscope results in the removal of oxidizable material (primarily hydrogen and carbon) by reactions similar to the water gas reaction .which has the form:The energy required to force the reaction to the right is supplied by the interaction of the electron beam with the specimen.The mass of water striking the specimen is given by:where u = gH2O/cm2 sec, PH2O = partial pressure of water in Torr, & T = absolute temperature of the gas phase. If it is assumed that mass is removed from the specimen by a reaction approximated by (1) and that the specimen is uniformly thinned by the reaction, then the thinning rate in A/ min iswhere x = thickness of the specimen in A, t = time in minutes, & E = efficiency (the fraction of the water striking the specimen which reacts with it).


Author(s):  
E. G. Rightor

Core edge spectroscopy methods are versatile tools for investigating a wide variety of materials. They can be used to probe the electronic states of materials in bulk solids, on surfaces, or in the gas phase. This family of methods involves promoting an inner shell (core) electron to an excited state and recording either the primary excitation or secondary decay of the excited state. The techniques are complimentary and have different strengths and limitations for studying challenging aspects of materials. The need to identify components in polymers or polymer blends at high spatial resolution has driven development, application, and integration of results from several of these methods.


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