The effect of atmospheric nitric acid vapor on cloud condensation nucleus activation

1993 ◽  
Vol 98 (D12) ◽  
pp. 22949 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Kulmala ◽  
A. Laaksonen ◽  
P. Korhonen ◽  
T. Vesala ◽  
T. Ahonen ◽  
...  
2014 ◽  
Vol 7 (5) ◽  
pp. 1377-1384 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Romakkaniemi ◽  
A. Jaatinen ◽  
A. Laaksonen ◽  
A. Nenes ◽  
T. Raatikainen

Abstract. The effect of inorganic semivolatile aerosol compounds on the cloud condensation nucleus (CCN) activity of aerosol particles was studied by using a computational model for a DMT-CCN counter, a cloud parcel model for condensation kinetics and experiments to quantify the modelled results. Concentrations of water vapour and semivolatiles as well as aerosol trajectories in the CCN column were calculated by a computational fluid dynamics model. These trajectories and vapour concentrations were then used as an input for the cloud parcel model to simulate mass transfer kinetics of water and semivolatiles between aerosol particles and the gas phase. Two different questions were studied: (1) how big a fraction of semivolatiles is evaporated from particles after entering but before particle activation in the DMT-CCN counter? (2) How much can the CCN activity be increased due to condensation of semivolatiles prior to the maximum water supersaturation in the case of high semivolatile concentration in the gas phase? Both experimental and modelling results show that the evaporation of ammonia and nitric acid from ammonium nitrate particles causes a 10 to 15 nm decrease to the critical particle size in supersaturations between 0.1% and 0.7%. On the other hand, the modelling results also show that condensation of nitric acid or similar vapour can increase the CCN activity of nonvolatile aerosol particles, but a very high gas phase concentration (as compared to typical ambient conditions) would be needed. Overall, it is more likely that the CCN activity of semivolatile aerosol is underestimated than overestimated in the measurements conducted in ambient conditions.


1993 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 70-80 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. E. Taylor ◽  
J. G. Owens ◽  
T. Grizzard ◽  
W. J. Selvidge

2014 ◽  
Vol 14 (11) ◽  
pp. 15771-15801
Author(s):  
E. M. Dunne ◽  
S. Mikkonen ◽  
H. Kokkola ◽  
H. Korhonen

Abstract. Low-level clouds have a strong climate-cooling effect in oceanic regions due to the much lower albedo of the underlying sea surface. Marine clouds typically have low droplet concentrations, making their radiative properties susceptible to changes in cloud condensation nucleus (CCN) concentrations. Here, we use the global aerosol model GLOMAP to investigate the processes that determine variations in marine CCN concentrations, and focus especially on the effects of previously identified wind speed trends in recent decades. Although earlier studies have found a link between linear wind speed trends and CCN concentration, we find that the effects of wind speed trends identified using a dynamic linear model in the Northern Equatorial Pacific (0.56 m s−1 per decade in the period 1990–2004) and the North Atlantic (−0.21 m s−1 per decade) are largely dampened by other processes controlling the CCN concentration, namely nucleation scavenging and transport of continental pollution. A CCN signal from wind speed change is seen only in the most pristine of the studied regions, i.e. over the Southern Ocean, where we simulate 3.4 cm−3 and 0.17 m s−1 increases over the fifteen-year period in the statistical mean levels of CCN and wind speed, respectively. Our results suggest that future changes in wind-speed-driven aerosol emissions from the oceans can probably have a climate feedback via clouds only in the most pristine regions. On the other hand, a feedback mechanism via changing precipitation patterns and intensities could take place over most oceanic regions, as we have shown that nucleation scavenging has by far the largest absolute effect on CCN concentrations.


1969 ◽  
Vol 52 (1) ◽  
pp. 182-187
Author(s):  
Norman E Delfel ◽  
William H Tallent

Abstract Rutenone and deguelin are separated by chromatography on silver nitrate-impregnated silica gel G with chloroform acetone: acetic acid (196:3:1) solvent system. Glass plates, 20 × 20 cm, are coated with a special spreader producing a 0.25 mm layer and a 1.00 mm band at the upper end. Since additional solvent is required to saturate the thicker band, such plates give resolutions comparable to plates twice as long. Developed plates are treated with nitric acid vapor, then ammonia vapor, to produce dark spots for the rotenoids. Plates are scanned with a commercial densitometer, and the quantity of rotenoids is calculated from peak area in the resultant curve. Kecoveries of rotenone and deguelin added to extracts of Tephrosia vogelii, Lonchocarpus nicou, and Derris elliptica averaged 104.1 and 99.4%, respectively. The standard deviation of the method applied to plant extracts was 7.9% for rotenone and 8.3% for deguelin. The amounts of rotenone in the L. nicou samples were comparable to those determined by the AOAC crystallization and infrared methods.


2008 ◽  
Vol 8 (20) ◽  
pp. 6273-6279 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. D. Petters ◽  
S. M. Kreidenweis

Abstract. The ability of a particle to serve as a cloud condensation nucleus in the atmosphere is determined by its size, hygroscopicity and its solubility in water. Usually size and hygroscopicity alone are sufficient to predict CCN activity. Single parameter representations for hygroscopicity have been shown to successfully model complex, multicomponent particles types. Under the assumption of either complete solubility, or complete insolubility of a component, it is not necessary to explicitly include that component's solubility into the single parameter framework. This is not the case if sparingly soluble materials are present. In this work we explicitly account for solubility by modifying the single parameter equations. We demonstrate that sensitivity to the actual value of solubility emerges only in the regime of 2×10−1–5×10−4, where the solubility values are expressed as volume of solute per unit volume of water present in a saturated solution. Compounds that do not fall inside this sparingly soluble envelope can be adequately modeled assuming they are either infinitely soluble in water or completely insoluble.


1982 ◽  
Vol 20 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sophia R. Su ◽  
Daniel W. Oblas

ABSTRACTGas-phase intercalation of graphite by nitric acid is a one-step process. The weight uptake of the sample is a function of nitric acid vapor pressure. A pure second stage compound was formed when the HNO3 reservoir was maintained at 17°C. Only a fourth stage compound was formed when the acid was kept at 0°C. The product gases due to intercalation and gas species evolved during deintercalation were analyzed by mass spectrometry. NO2 and H2O were the major components detected from the intercalation product gases. A small amount of oxygen was also present. The existence of O2 is probably due to the photo-chemical decomposition of nitric acid. As such, the photodecomposition of nitric acid is not a contributory factor in the intercalation chemistry.


2014 ◽  
Vol 14 (24) ◽  
pp. 13631-13642 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. M. Dunne ◽  
S. Mikkonen ◽  
H. Kokkola ◽  
H. Korhonen

Abstract. Low-level clouds have a strong climate-cooling effect in oceanic regions due to the much lower albedo of the underlying sea surface. Marine clouds typically have low droplet concentrations, making their radiative properties susceptible to changes in cloud condensation nucleus (CCN) concentrations. Here, we use the global aerosol model GLOMAP to investigate the processes that determine variations in marine CCN concentrations, and focus especially on the effects of previously identified wind speed trends in recent decades. Although earlier studies have found a link between linear wind speed trends and CCN concentration, we find that the effects of wind speed trends identified using a dynamic linear model in the Northern Equatorial Pacific (0.56 m s−1 per decade in the period 1990–2004) and the North Atlantic (−0.21 m s−1 per decade) are largely dampened by other processes controlling the CCN concentration, namely nucleation scavenging and transport of continental pollution. A CCN signal from wind speed change is seen only in the most pristine of the studied regions, i.e. over the Southern Ocean, where we simulate 3.4 cm−3 and 0.17 m s−1 increases over the 15-year period in the statistical mean levels of CCN and wind speed, respectively. Our results suggest that future changes in wind-speed-driven aerosol emissions from the oceans can probably have a climate feedback via clouds only in the most pristine regions. On the other hand, a feedback mechanism via changing precipitation patterns and intensities could take place over most oceanic regions, as we have shown that nucleation scavenging has by far the largest absolute effect on CCN concentrations.


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