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Tuesday, October 8, 2019

Optical deformation of single aerosol particles

Aidan Rafferty, Kyle Gorkowski, Andreas Zuend, and Thomas C. Preston

Advancements in designing complex models for atmospheric aerosol science and aerosol–cloud interactions rely vitally on accurately measuring the physicochemical properties of microscopic particles. Optical tweezers are a laboratory-based platform that can provide access to such measurements as they are able to isolate individual particles from an ensemble. The surprising ability of a focused beam of light to trap and hold a single particle can be conceptually understood in the ray optics regime using momentum transfer and Newton’s second law. The same radiation pressure that results in stable trapping will also exert a deforming optical stress on the surface of the particle. For micron-sized aqueous droplets held in the air, the deformation will be on the order of a few nanometers or less, clearly not observable through optical microscopy. In this study, we utilize cavity-enhanced Raman scattering and a phenomenon known as thermal locking to measure small deformations in optically trapped droplets. With the aid of light-scattering calculations and a model that balances the hydrostatic pressure, surface tension, and optical pressure across the air–droplet interface, we can accurately determine surface tension from our measurements. Our approach is applied to 2 systems of atmospheric interest: aqueous organic and inorganic aerosol.

DOI

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