Real-time evolution of optical and morphological properties in levitated aqueous microdroplets via iron-catalyzed catechol reactions
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Atmospheric aerosol Radiative forcing Aerosol aging
Fecha
2025-11Referencia bibliográfica
Valenzuela, A., Sánchez Jiménez, G., Titos, G., Lin, W., Rejano, F., Alados Arboledas, L., & Al-Abadleh, H. A. (2025). Real-time evolution of optical and morphological properties in levitated aqueous microdroplets via iron-catalyzed catechol reactions. Journal of Aerosol Science, 190(106659), 106659. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaerosci.2025.106659
Patrocinador
MCIU/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 (FENIX – PID2023-151668OB-I00; ELPIS – PID2020-120015RB-I00; NUCLEUS – PID2021-128757OB-I00); Unión Europea – Next Generation EU / PRTR; Unión Europea – Horizon / Research & Innovation Programme (ACTRIS-IMP – Grant Agreement 871115; ATMO-ACCESS – Grant Agreement 101008004); ACTRIS-España (RED2022-134824-E); Universidad de Granada / CBUA (Funding for open access charge)Resumen
The direct radiative impact of atmospheric aerosols remains more uncertain than that of greenhouse gases, largely due to the complex transformations’ aerosols undergo during atmospheric
aging. Sulfate aerosols have been the subject of considerable research, with a robust body of
literature characterising their cooling effect. In contrast, the light-absorbing properties and
warming potential of black carbon and related products remain less well understood, with limited
research available to date. The present study examines the iron-catalyzed reaction of catechol in
levitated microdroplets, tracked in situ using elastic light scattering spectroscopy. The reaction
forms water-insoluble polycatechol aggregates, which drive a transition from homogeneous
spheres to heterogeneous droplets with internal inclusions. To interpret the evolving optical
behaviour, the Multiple Sphere T-Matrix (MSTM) model is employed, a method which overcomes
the limitations of Mie theory by accounting for internal morphological complexity. The model
provides realistic complex refractive indices and fractal parameters, though it should be noted
that its solutions are not unique due to sensitivity to input assumptions and droplet variability.
This underscores the necessity for supplementary measurements and more comprehensive models
incorporating evaporation, chemical dynamics, and phase transitions. These findings emphasise
the potential of elastic scattering spectroscopy for real-time monitoring of multiphase chemistry
and offer new constraints for improving aerosol aging schemes in climate models, thereby
contributing to reduced uncertainties in aerosol radiative forcing.





