Progress and Problems in Modeling Chemical Processing in Cloud Droplets and Wet Aerosol Particles

Author(s):  
Barbara Ervens
Author(s):  
Alberto Sanchez-Marroquin ◽  
Jonathan S. West ◽  
Ian Burke ◽  
James B McQuaid ◽  
Benjamin John Murray

A small fraction of aerosol particles known as Ice-Nucleating Particles (INPs) have the potential to trigger ice formation in cloud droplets at higher temperatures than homogeneous freezing. INPs can strongly...


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexis Dépée ◽  
Pascal Lemaitre ◽  
Thomas Gelain ◽  
Marie Monier ◽  
Andrea Flossmann

Abstract. A new In-Cloud Aerosol Scavenging Experiment (In-CASE) has been conceived to measure the collection efficiency (CE) of submicron aerosol particles by cloud droplets. In this setup, droplets fall at their terminal velocity through a one-meter-high chamber in a laminar flow containing aerosol particles. At the bottom of the In-CASE's chamber, the droplet train is separated from the aerosol particle flow – droplets are collected in an impaction cup whereas aerosol particles are deposited on a High Efficiency Particulate Air (HEPA) filter. The collected droplets and the filter are then analysed by fluorescence spectrometry since the aerosol particles are atomised from a sodium fluorescein salt solution (C20H10Na2O5). In-CASE fully controls all the parameters which affect the CE – the droplets and aerosol particles size distributions are monodispersed, the electric charges of droplets and aerosol particles are controlled, while the relative humidity is indirectly set via the chamber's temperature. This novel In-CASE setup is presented here as well as the first measurements obtained to study the impact of relative humidity on CE. For this purpose, droplets and particles are electrically neutralised. A droplet radius of 49.6 ± 1.3 μm has been considered for six particle dry radii between 50 and 250 nm and three relative humidity levels of 71.1 ± 1.3, 82.4 ± 1.4 and 93.5 ± 0.9 %. These new CE measurements have been compared to the Wang et al. (1978) and the extended model of Dépée et al. (2019) where thermophoresis and diffusiophoresis are implemented. Both models adequately describe the relative humidity influence on the measured CE.


2003 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 3625-3657
Author(s):  
M. Seifert ◽  
J. Ström ◽  
R. Krejci ◽  
A. Minikin ◽  
A. Petzold ◽  
...  

Abstract. In situ measurements of the partitioning of aerosol particles within cirrus clouds were used to investigate aerosol-cloud interactions in ice clouds. The number density of interstitial aerosol particles (non-activated particles in between the cirrus crystals) was compared to the number density of cirrus crystal residuals. The data was obtained during the two INCA (Interhemispheric Differences in Cirrus Properties form Anthropogenic Emissions) campaigns, performed in the Southern Hemisphere (SH) and Northern Hemisphere (NH) midlatitudes. Different aerosol-cirrus interactions can be linked to the different stages of the cirrus lifecycle. Cloud formation is linked to positive correlations between the number density of interstitial aerosol (Nint) and crystal residuals (Ncvi), whereas the correlations are smaller or even negative in a dissolving cloud. Unlike warm clouds, where the number density of cloud droplets is positively related to the aerosol number density, we observed a rather complex relationship when expressing Ncvi as a function of Nint for forming clouds. The data sets are similar in that they both show local maxima in the Nint range 100 to 200 cm−3, where the SH-maximum is shifted towards the higher value. For lower number densities Nint and Ncvi are positively related. The slopes emerging from the data suggest that a tenfold increase in the aerosol number density corresponds to a 3 to 4 times increase in the crystal number density. As Nint increases beyond the ca. 100 to 200 cm−3, the mean crystal number density decreases at about the same rate for both data sets. For much higher aerosol number densities, only present in the NH data set, the mean Ncvi remains low. The situation for dissolving clouds presents two alternative interactions between aerosols and cirrus. Either evaporating clouds are associated with a source of aerosol particles, or air pollution (high aerosol number density) retards evaporation rates.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amina Khaled ◽  
Minghui Zhang ◽  
Barbara Ervens

Abstract. Reactive oxygen species (ROS), such as OH, HO2, H2O2 affect the oxidation capacity of the atmosphere and cause adverse health effects of particulate matter. The role of transition metal ions (TMIs) in impacting the ROS concentrations and conversions in the atmospheric aqueous phase has been recognized for a long time. Model studies usually assume that the total TMI concentration as measured in bulk aerosol or cloud water samples is distributed equally across all particles or droplets. This assumption is contrary to single-particle measurements that have shown that only a small number fraction of particles contain iron and other TMIs (FN,Fe < 100 %) which implies that also not all cloud droplets contain TMIs. In the current study, we apply a box model with an explicit multiphase chemical mechanism to simulate ROS formation and cycling in (i) aqueous aerosol particles and (ii) cloud droplets. Model simulations are performed for the range of 1 % ≤ FN,Fe ≤ 100 % for constant pH values of 3, 4.5 and 6 and constant total iron concentration (10 or 50 . Model results are compared for two sets of simulations with FN,Fe < 100 % (FeN < 100) and 100 % (FeBulk). We find largest differences between model results in OH and HO2/O2− concentrations at pH = 6. Under these conditions, HO2 is subsaturated in the aqueous phase because of its high effective Henry's law constant and the fast chemical loss reactions of the O2− radical anion. As the main reduction of process of Fe(III) is its reaction with HO2/O2−, we show that the HO2 subsaturation leads to predicted Fe(II)/Fe(total) ratios for FN,Fe < 100 % that are lower by a factor of ≤ 2 as compared to bulk model approaches. This trend is largely independent of the total iron concentration, as both chemical source and sink rates of HO2/O2− scale with the iron concentration. The chemical radical (OH, HO2) loss in particles is usually compensated by its uptake from the gas phase. We compare model-derived reactive uptake parameters γ(OH) and γ(HO2) for the full range of FN,Fe. While γ(OH) is not affected by the iron distribution, the calculated γ(HO2) range from 0.0004 to 0.03 for FN,Fe = 1 % and 100 %, respectively. Implications of these findings are discussed for the application of lab-derived γ(HO2) in models to present reactive HO2 uptake on aerosols. As the oxidant budget in aerosol particles and cloud droplets is related to the oxidative potential, we also conclude that the iron distribution FN,Fe should be taken into account to estimate the ROS concentrations and health impacts of particulate matter that might be overestimated by bulk sampling and model approaches. Our study suggests that the number concentration of iron-containing particles may be more important than the total iron mass concentration in determining ROS budgets and uptake rates in cloud and aerosol water.


2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (5) ◽  
pp. eaav7689 ◽  
Author(s):  
Suzanne E. Paulson ◽  
Peter J. Gallimore ◽  
Xiaobi M. Kuang ◽  
Jie Rou Chen ◽  
Markus Kalberer ◽  
...  

Aerosol particles and their interactions with clouds are one of the most uncertain aspects of the climate system. Aerosol processing by clouds contributes to this uncertainty, altering size distributions, chemical composition, and radiative properties. Many changes are limited by the availability of hydroxyl radicals in the droplets. We suggest an unrecognized potentially substantial source of OH formation in cloud droplets. During the first few minutes following cloud droplet formation, the material in aerosols produces a near-UV light–dependent burst of hydroxyl radicals, resulting in concentrations of 0.1 to 3.5 micromolar aqueous OH ([OH]aq). The source of this burst is previously unrecognized chemistry between iron(II) and peracids. The contribution of the “OH burst” to total OH in droplets varies widely, but it ranges up to a factor of 5 larger than previously known sources. Thus, this new process will substantially enhance the impact of clouds on aerosol properties.


2013 ◽  
Vol 94 (5) ◽  
pp. 685-694 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nilton O. Rennó ◽  
Earle Williams ◽  
Daniel Rosenfeld ◽  
David G. Fischer ◽  
Jürgen Fischer ◽  
...  

The formation of cloud droplets on aerosol particles, technically known as the activation of cloud condensation nuclei (CCN), is the fundamental process driving the interactions of aerosols with clouds and precipitation. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and the Decadal Survey indicate that the uncertainty in how clouds adjust to aerosol perturbations dominates the uncertainty in the overall quantification of the radiative forcing attributable to human activities. Measurements by current satellites allow the determination of crude profiles of cloud particle size, but not of the activated CCN that seed them. The Clouds, Hazards, and Aerosols Survey for Earth Researchers (CHASER) mission concept responds to the IPCC and Decadal Survey concerns, utilizing a new technique and high-heritage instruments to measure all the quantities necessary to produce the first global survey maps of activated CCN and the properties of the clouds associated with them. CHASER also determines the activated CCN concentration and cloud thermodynamic forcing simultaneously, allowing the effects of each to be distinguished.


2006 ◽  
Vol 6 (6) ◽  
pp. 1627-1634 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Romakkaniemi ◽  
H. Kokkola ◽  
K. E. J. Lehtinen ◽  
A. Laaksonen

Abstract. In this paper we present simulations of the effect of nitric acid (HNO3) on cloud processing of aerosol particles. Sulfuric acid (H2SO4) production and incloud coagulation are both affected by condensed nitric acid as nitric acid increases the number of cloud droplets, which will lead to smaller mean size and higher total surface area of droplets. As a result of increased cloud droplet number concentration (CDNC), the incloud coagulation rate is enhanced by a factor of 1–1.3, so that the number of interstitial particles reduces faster. In addition, sulfuric acid production occurs in smaller particles and so the cloud processed aerosol size distribution is dependent on the HNO3 concentration. This affects both radiative properties of aerosol particles and the formation of cloud droplets during a sequence of cloud formation-evaporation events. It is shown that although the condensation of HNO3 increases the number of cloud droplets during the single updraft, it is possible that presence of HNO3 can actually decrease the cloud droplet number concentration after several cloud cycles when also H2SO4 production is taken into account.


2008 ◽  
Vol 8 (19) ◽  
pp. 5869-5887 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. C. Shantz ◽  
W. R. Leaitch ◽  
L. Phinney ◽  
M. Mozurkewich ◽  
D. Toom-Sauntry

Abstract. Organic matter represents an important fraction of the fine particle aerosol, yet our knowledge of the roles of organics in the activation of aerosol particles into cloud droplets is poor. A cloud condensation nucleus (CCN) counter is used to examine the relative growth rates of cloud droplets for case studies from field measurements on the North Pacific Ocean and in a coniferous forest. A model of the condensational growth of water droplets, on particles dissolving according to their solubility in water, is used to simulate the initial scattering of the droplets as they grow in the CCN counter. Simulations of the growth rates of fine particles sampled in the marine boundary layer of the North Pacific Ocean shows no evidence of natural marine organic material contributing to the CCN water uptake but there is an indication of an influence from organics from diesel ship emissions on the size distribution of sulphate and the ability of these particles to act as CCN. Simulations of the observations of water uptake on biogenic organic aerosol particles sampled in a coniferous forest indicate an impact of the organic on the water uptake rates, but one that is still smaller than that of pure sulphate. The existence of organics becomes important in determining the water uptake as the organic mass increases relative to sulphate. The values of the organic component of the hygroscopicity parameter κ that describes the CCN activity were found to be negligible for the marine particles and 0.02–0.05 for the forest particles.


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