Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4453365 | Journal of Aerosol Science | 2006 | 13 Pages |
The kinetics of iodine oxide aerosol production and growth was studied in an aerosol flow reactor by the photolysis of I2I2 in an excess of O3O3, at a temperature of 295 K and a total pressure of 1 atm. The time-resolved evolution of the particle size distribution was fitted using a model which assumes that the initial period of particle growth (in the free molecular flow regime) is dominated by collision-coalescence, maintaining spherical shape and compact structure. This leads to the formation of primary particles of about 3 nm radius, which trigger fractal (agglomerative) growth in the transition regime resulting in particle aggregates characterised by lower mass fractal dimensions (Df)(Df) in the range 2.2–2.5. Enhancement of the particle pair collision kernels due to competing van der Waals and hydrodynamic forces is treated within the model. The densities of the fractal aggregates are lower than that of the bulk material, recently identified as I2O5I2O5 [Saunders, R. W., & Plane, J. M. C. (2005). Formation pathways and composition of iodine oxide ultrafine particles. Environmental Chemistry, 2, 299], as a result of internal void space within the aggregate structures.