scholarly journals Supplementary material to "The importance of crystalline phases in ice nucleation by volcanic ash"

Author(s):  
Elena C. Maters ◽  
Donald B. Dingwell ◽  
Corrado Cimarelli ◽  
Dirk Müller ◽  
Thomas F. Whale ◽  
...  
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elena C. Maters ◽  
Donald B. Dingwell ◽  
Corrado Cimarelli ◽  
Dirk Müller ◽  
Thomas F. Whale ◽  
...  

Abstract. Volcanic ash is known to nucleate ice when immersed in supercooled water droplets. This process may impact the properties and dynamics of the eruption plume and cloud, as well as those of meteorological clouds once the ash is dispersed in the atmosphere. However, knowledge of what controls the ice-nucleating effectiveness (INE) of ash remains limited, although it has been suggested that crystalline components in ash may play an important role. Here we adopted a novel approach using nine pairs of tephra and their remelted and quenched glass equivalents to investigate the influence of chemical composition, crystallinity and mineralogy on ash INE in the immersion mode. For all nine pairs studied, the crystal-bearing tephra nucleated ice at higher temperatures than the corresponding crystal-free glass, demonstrating that crystalline phases are key to ash INE. Similar to findings for desert dust from arid and semi-arid regions, the presence of feldspar minerals characterises the four most ice-active tephra samples, although a high INE is observed even in the absence of alkali feldspar in samples bearing plagioclase feldspar and orthopyroxene. There is evidence of a potential indirect relationship between chemical composition and ash INE, whereby a magma of felsic to intermediate composition may generate ash containing ice-active feldspar minerals. This complex interplay between chemical composition, crystallinity, and mineralogy could help partly to explain the variability in volcanic ash INE reported in the literature. Overall, by categorically demonstrating the importance of crystalline phases in the INE of volcanic ash, our study contributes insights essential for better appraising the role of airborne ash in ice formation. Among these is the inference that glass-dominated ash emitted by the largest explosive eruptions may be less effective at impacting ice-nucleating particle populations than crystalline ash generated by smaller, more frequent eruptions.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fabian Mahrt ◽  
Claudia Marcolli ◽  
Robert O. David ◽  
Philippe Grönquist ◽  
Eszter J. Barthazy Meier ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 42 (8) ◽  
pp. 3048-3055 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gourihar Kulkarni ◽  
Manjula Nandasiri ◽  
Alla Zelenyuk ◽  
Josef Beranek ◽  
Nitesh Madaan ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2015 ◽  
Vol 15 (13) ◽  
pp. 7523-7536 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. P. Schill ◽  
K. Genareau ◽  
M. A. Tolbert

Abstract. Ice nucleation of volcanic ash controls both ash aggregation and cloud glaciation, which affect atmospheric transport and global climate. Previously, it has been suggested that there is one characteristic ice nucleation efficiency for all volcanic ash, regardless of its composition, when accounting for surface area; however, this claim is derived from data from only two volcanic eruptions. In this work, we have studied the depositional and immersion freezing efficiency of three distinct samples of volcanic ash using Raman microscopy coupled to an environmental cell. Ash from the Fuego (basaltic ash, Guatemala), Soufrière Hills (andesitic ash, Montserrat), and Taupo (Oruanui eruption, rhyolitic ash, New Zealand) volcanoes were chosen to represent different geographical locations and silica content. All ash samples were quantitatively analyzed for both percent crystallinity and mineralogy using X-ray diffraction. In the present study, we find that all three samples of volcanic ash are excellent depositional ice nuclei, nucleating ice from 225 to 235 K at ice saturation ratios of 1.05 ± 0.01, comparable to the mineral dust proxy kaolinite. Since depositional ice nucleation will be more important at colder temperatures, fine volcanic ash may represent a global source of cold-cloud ice nuclei. For immersion freezing relevant to mixed-phase clouds, however, only the Oruanui ash exhibited appreciable heterogeneous ice nucleation activity. Similar to recent studies on mineral dust, we suggest that the mineralogy of volcanic ash may dictate its ice nucleation activity in the immersion mode.


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