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Fluorescent Visualization of Chemical Profiles across the Air–Water Interface
Chemical transfer across the air–water interface is one of the most important geochemical processes of global significance. Quantifying such a process has remained extremely challenging due to the lack of suitable technologies to measure chemical diffusion across the air–water microlayer. Herein, we present a fluorescence optical system capable of visualizing the formation of the air–water microlayer with a spatial resolution of 10 μm and quantifying air–water diffusion fluxes using pyrene as a target chemical. We show for the first time that the air–water microlayer is composed of the surface microlayer in water (∼290 ± 40 μm) and a diffusion layer in air (∼350 ± 40 μm) with 1 μg L–1 of pyrene. The diffusion flux of pyrene across the air–water interface is derived from its high-resolution concentration profile without any pre-emptive assumption, which is 2 orders of magnitude lower than those from the conventional method. This system can be expanded to visualize diffusion dynamics of other fluorescent chemicals across the air–water interface and provides a powerful tool for furthering our understanding of air–water mass transfer of organic chemicals related to their global cycling.