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Relative humidity effects water vapor formation

The life persistency of a smoke cloud is deterrnined chiefly by wind and convection currents in the air. Ambient temperature also plays a part in the continuance or disappearance of fog oil smokes. Water vapor in the air has an important role in the formation of most chemically generated smokes, and high relative humidity improves the performance of these smokes. The water vapor not only exerts effects through hydrolysis, but it also assists the growth of hygroscopic (deliquescent) smoke particles to an effective size by a process of hydration. Smoke may be generated by mechanical, thermal, or chemical means, or by a combination of these processes (7). [Pg.401]

Only two possibilities exist for explaining the existence of cloud formation in the atmosphere. If there were no particles to act as cloud condensation nuclei (CCN), water would condense into clouds at relative humidities (RH) of around 300%. That is, air can remain supersaturated below 300% with water vapor for long periods of fime. If this were to occur, condensation would occur on surface objects and the hydrologic cycle would be very different from what is observed. Thus, a second possibility must be the case particles are present in the air and act as CCN at much lower RH. These particles must be small enough to have small settling velocity, stay in the air for long periods of time and be lofted to the top of the troposphere by ordinary updrafts of cm/s velocity. Two further possibilities exist - the particles can either be water soluble or insoluble. In order to understand why it is likely that CCN are soluble, we examine the consequences of the effect of curvature on the saturation water pressure of water. [Pg.144]

Figure 8.6 shows the effect of water vapor on the formation of C02 and BA for the toluene oxidation. The concentration of C02 increased linearly with the increase in relative humidity. The yield at 60% relative humidity was greater by one order than that in the dry condition. It has been pointed out that the amount of 02 adsorbed under photoillumination is proportional to that of hydroxyl groups (OH-) un the Ti02 surface. The phenomenon has been explained by the following reactions ... [Pg.252]

This initial stage of droplet formation deserves a careful explanation. Over a flat, pure water surface at 100% relative humidity (saturation with respect to water), water vapor is in equilibrium, which means that the number of water molecules leaving the water surface is balanced by the number arriving at the surface. Molecules at water surfaces are subjected to intermolecular attractive forces exerted by the nearby molecules below. If the water surface area is increased by adding curvature, molecules must be moved from the interior to the surface layer, in which case energy is required to oppose the cohesive forces of the liquid. As a consequence, for a pure water droplet to be at equilibrium, the relative humidity has to exceed the relative humidity at equilibrium over a flat, pure water surface, or be supersaturated. The flux of molecules to and from a surface produces what is known as vapor pressure. The equilibrium vapor pressure is less over a salt solution than it is over pure water at the same temperature. This effect balances to some extent the increase in equilibrium vapor pressure caused by the surface curvature of small droplets. Droplets with high concentrations of solute can then be at equilibrium at subsaturation. [Pg.81]


See other pages where Relative humidity effects water vapor formation is mentioned: [Pg.684]    [Pg.452]    [Pg.252]    [Pg.257]    [Pg.200]    [Pg.1592]    [Pg.459]    [Pg.251]    [Pg.246]    [Pg.56]    [Pg.182]    [Pg.684]    [Pg.510]    [Pg.399]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.202 , Pg.203 ]




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