AI Article Synopsis

  • Atmospheric aerosol particles significantly influence climate by interacting with water, forming ice in clouds, and undergoing chemical reactions.
  • Conventional electron microscopy alters the surface and structure of these particles, making it hard to study them in their natural state.
  • The introduction of cryogenic transmission electron microscopy enables the observation of aerosol particles, including sea spray, in their native forms, revealing important biological and chemical components that affect their interactions in the atmosphere.

Article Abstract

The composition and surface properties of atmospheric aerosol particles largely control their impact on climate by affecting their ability to uptake water, react heterogeneously, and nucleate ice in clouds. However, in the vacuum of a conventional electron microscope, the native surface and internal structure often undergo physicochemical rearrangement resulting in surfaces that are quite different from their atmospheric configurations. Herein, we report the development of cryogenic transmission electron microscopy where laboratory generated sea spray aerosol particles are flash frozen in their native state with iterative and controlled thermal and/or pressure exposures and then probed by electron microscopy. This unique approach allows for the detection of not only mixed salts, but also soft materials including whole hydrated bacteria, diatoms, virus particles, marine vesicles, as well as gel networks within hydrated salt droplets-all of which will have distinct biological, chemical, and physical processes. We anticipate this method will open up a new avenue of analysis for aerosol particles, not only for ocean-derived aerosols, but for those produced from other sources where there is interest in the transfer of organic or biological species from the biosphere to the atmosphere.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4731829PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acscentsci.5b00344DOI Listing

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