Efflorescence
of ammonium nitrate (AN) aerosols significantly
impacts
atmospheric secondary aerosol formation, climate, and human health.
We investigated the effect of representative water-soluble organic
compounds (WSOCs) (sucralose (SUC), glycerol (GLY), and citric acid
(CA) on AN:WSOC aerosol efflorescence using vacuum Fourier transform
infrared spectroscopy. Combining efflorescence relative humidity (ERH)
measurements, heterogeneous nucleation rates, and model predictions,
we found that aerosol viscosity, correlating with molecular diffusion,
effectively predicted ERH variations among the AN:WSOC aerosols. WSOCs
with higher viscosity (SUC and CA) hindered efflorescence, while GLY
with a lower viscosity showed a minor effect. At a low AN:CA molar
ratio (10:1), CA promoted ERH, likely due to CA crystallization. Increasing
the droplet pH inhibited AN:CA aerosol efflorescence. In contrast,
for AN:SUC and AN:GLY aerosols, efflorescence is pH-insensitive.
With the addition of trivial sulfate, AN:SUC droplets exhibited two-stage
efflorescence, coinciding with ammonium sulfate and AN efflorescence.
Given the atmospheric abundance, the morphology, phase, and mixing
state of nitrate aerosols are significant for atmospheric chemistry
and physics. Our results suggest that AN:WSOCs aerosols can exist
in the amorphous phase in the atmosphere, with efflorescence behavior
depending on the aerosol composition, viscosity, pH, and the cation
and anion interactions in a complex manner.