Deposition nucleation on mineral dust particles: A case against classical nucleation theory with the assumption of a single contact angle

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Abstract

Deposition nucleation on two mineral species, kaolinite and illite, was studied using a flow cell coupled to an optical microscope. The results show that the Sice conditions when ice first nucleated, defined as the onset Sice (Sice,onset), is a strong function of the surface area available for nucleation, varying from 100% to 125% at temperatures between 242 and 239 K. The surface area dependent data could not be described accurately using classical nucleation theory and the assumption of a single contact angle (defined here as the single-α model). These results suggest that caution should be applied when using contact angles determined from Sice,onset data and the single-α model. In contrast to the single-α model, the active site model, the deterministic model, and a model with a distribution of contact angles fit the data within experimental uncertainties. Parameters from the fits to the data are presented. © 2012 Author(s). CC Attribution 3.0 License.

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Wheeler, M. J., & Bertram, A. K. (2012). Deposition nucleation on mineral dust particles: A case against classical nucleation theory with the assumption of a single contact angle. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 12(2), 1189–1201. https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-12-1189-2012

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