More or less, that's right. In particular, it's the interaction at the liquid (solvent) -- gas (atmosphere) boundary. That's a two-dimensional
boundary, so the orthogonal complement is one dimension. You can call it "up" if you want. The important thing is that the pressure near the boundary
changes the rate at which solvent evaporates. The pressure near the boundary doesn't change the partial pressure of the solvent at the boundary. What
it does change is the rate at which gas molecule near the boundary diffuse away from the boundary, which enables new liquid molecules to hop the
boundary and go from liquid to gas phase. |