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surface is covered by oceans, a large number of liquid aerosol particles fill the air, and clouds hold a tiny but critical fraction of Earth's water in the air to influence our climate and hydrology, enabling the lives of humans and ecosystems. The surfaces of these liquids provide the interface for the transfer of gases, for nucleation processes, and for catalyzing important chemical reactions. Coupling a range of spectroscopic tools to liquid microjets has become an important approach to better understanding dynamics, structure, and chemistry at liquid interfaces. Liquid microjets offer stability in vacuum and ambient pressure environments, thus also allowing X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) with manageable efforts in terms of differential pumping. Liquid microjets are operated at speeds sufficient to allow for a locally equilibrated surface in terms of water dynamics and solute surface partitioning. XPS is based on the emission of core-level electrons, the binding energy of which is selective for the element and its chemical environment. Inelastic scattering of electrons establishes the probing depth of XPS in the nanometer range and thus its surface sensitivity.In this Account, we focus on aqueous solutions relevant to the surface of oceans, aqueous aerosols, or cloudwater. We are interested in understanding solvation and acid dissociation at the interface, interfacial aspects of reactions with gas-phase reactants, and the interplay of ions with organic molecules at the interface. The strategy is to obtain a link between the molecular-level picture and macroscopic properties and reactivity in the atmospheric context.We show consistency between surface tension and XPS for a range of surface-active organic species as an important proof for interrogating an equilibrated liquid surface. Measurements with organic acids and amines offer important insight into the question of apparent acidity or basicity at the interface. Liquid microjet XPS has settled the debate of the surface enhancement of halide ions, shown using the example of bromide and its oxidation products. Despite the absence of a strong enhancement for the bromide ion, its rate of oxidation by ozone is surface catalyzed through the stabilization of the bromide ozonide intermediate at the interface. In another reaction system, the one between Fe and HO, a similar intermediate in the form of highly valent iron species could not be detected by XPS under the experimental conditions employed, shedding light on the abundance of this intermediate in the environment but also on the constraints within which surface species can be detected. Emphasizing the importance of electrostatic effects, we show how a cationic surfactant attracts charged bromide anions to the interface, accompanied by enhanced oxidation rates by ozone, overriding the role of surfactants as a barrier for the access of gas-phase reactants. The reactivity and structure at interfaces thus result from a subtle balance between hygroscopic and hydrophobic interactions, electrostatic effects, and the structural properties of both liquids and solutes.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.accounts.2c00604 | DOI Listing |
Ultra-intense laser and plasma interactions with their ability to accelerate particles reaching relativistic speed are exciting from a fundamental high-field physics perspective. Such relativistic laser-plasma interaction (RLPI) offers a plethora of critical applications for energy, space, and defense enterprise. At AFIT's Extreme Light Laboratory (ELL), we have demonstrated such RLPI employing a table-top ∼10, 40 fs laser pulses at a kHz repetition rate that produce different types of secondary radiations via target normal sheath acceleration (TNSA).
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August 2025
Departamento de Ingeniería Aeroespacial y Mecánica de Fluidos, Universidad de Sevilla, E-41092 Sevilla, Spain.
We have produced superstable compound liquid microjets with a 3D-printed coaxial flow-focusing injector. The aqueous jet core is surrounded by a shell, a few hundred nanometres in thickness, of a low-concentration aqueous solution of a low-molecular-weight polymer. Due to the stabilizing effect of the polymeric shell, the minimum liquid flow rate leading to stable flow-focusing is decreased by one order of magnitude, resulting in much thinner and longer jets.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUltrason Sonochem
September 2025
State Key Laboratory of Hydraulics and Mountain River Engineering, Sichuan University, Chengdu 610065, China.
How to efficiently utilize cavitation to promote chemical reactions or degrade microorganisms is a concern in the fields of biological and chemical engineering. Changes in liquid temperature can affect bubble dynamics, thereby influencing chemical reaction rates or microbial degradation efficiency. This study used the method of corona discharge induced bubbles, combined with high-speed camera system and temperature control system, to investigate the effect of salted water temperature on the bubble collapse behavior in the free field and below the liquid surface.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFColloids Surf B Biointerfaces
July 2025
Key Laboratory of Biomaterials of Guangdong Higher Education Institutes, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Jinan University, Guangzhou 510632, China; MOE Key Laboratory of Tumor Molecular Biology, Jinan University, Guangzhou 510632, China. Electronic address:
Minoxidil (Mi) is currently one of the most commonly used drugs for the treatment of hair loss in clinical settings. It works by accelerating blood flow around the hair follicles, enhancing local oxygen and nutrient supply, thereby promoting hair growth. However, traditional formulations of Mi have a short residence time on the skin, are prone to causing allergic reactions, scaling, and may even induce systemic hypertrichosis as side effects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUltrason Sonochem
September 2025
Bailie School of Petroleum Engineering, Lanzhou City University, Lanzhou 730071, PR China.
The interaction among cavitation bubbles, particles, and solid boundaries critically governs energy transfer in fluid systems. This study employs high-resolution numerical simulations to investigate how fluid flow and solid surfaces influence small scale bubble dynamics, energy dissipation, and load effects. The simulations cover a range of initial particle-bubble distances (D = 0.
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