10:45 AM - 12:15 PM
[MIS14-P11] Nucleation experiments of ice nanoparticles by low-temperature gas evaporation method under microgravity environment using an aircraft
Keywords:Nucleation, Microgravity, Nanoparticle, Ice
In order to obtain accurate physical quantities necessary for modeling nucleation, nucleation experiments must be performed in a homogeneous environment obtained in microgravity [4-6], which is also necessary to observe the infrared spectrum during nucleation process over a long period of time. Therefore, we have developed a small nucleation chamber that can be onboard an aircraft or sounding rocket , which can provide a microgravity environment. In order to obtain accurate data necessary for understanding nucleation, experiments using sounding rockets that can obtain a microgravity environment of about 10-4 G will eventually be necessary. Here we report preliminary results of a microgravity experiment using an aircraft (MU-300, Diamond Air Service) as a preliminary experiment for this purpose.
The low-temperature nucleation chamber was constructed as a double-tube structure, and the chamber was cooled by a refrigerant in the outer tube. The temperature of the evaporation source and argon gas, which is introduced into the chamber as a buffer gas, in the chamber is also cooled by the refrigerant, and at the beginning of the experiment, both are in thermal equilibrium.
The water vapor generated by heating and sublimating ice in the developed low-temperature nucleation chamber is cooled by argon gas. Nanoparticles are formed through homogeneous nucleation after supersaturation. This process was observed in situ using a double-wavelength Mach-Zehnder type laser interferometer and an infrared spectrometer. The interferometer can quantitatively determine the temperature and concentration fields from evaporation to nucleation, and the infrared spectra can study the changes in the crystal structure of water and ice particles during the nucleation process.
Since there is a limit to the amount of refrigerant that can be carried on board an aircraft, a refrigerant with a melting point of -51°C was used in this experiment. As a result of the experiment, we succeeded in capturing the moment of nucleation by interferometer, and also succeeded in capturing the temporal change in the intensity of infrared absorption. This means that the nucleation process of ice nanoparticles from water vapor was captured. This achievement is expected to lead to the construction of a nucleation model that can predict the state of ice dust formation that repeatedly sublimated and condensed in the primordial solar nebula 4.6 billion years ago.
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[2] R. Uyeda Morphology of crystals, Part B, Ed. I. Sunagawa, p. 369, Terra, Tokyo, 1987.
[3] C. Kaito Japanese Journal of Applied Physics, 17 (1978) 601.
[4] Y. Kimura, et al. Science Advances, 3 (2017) e1601992.
[5] Y. Kimura, et al. The Astrophysical Journal Letters, 934 (2022) L10.
[6] Y. Kimura, et al. Science Advances, 9 (2023) eadd8295.
This experiment was partially supported by the Sumitomo Foundation Basic Science Research Grant, the Core Facility Project "R&T Collaboration Project" of Hokkaido University, and the Special Committee on Space Environment Utilization Front Loading Research of the ISAS, JAXA.