*This item and others will be in the monthly “Solar Geoengineering Updates
Substack” newsletter:* https://solargeoengineeringupdates.substack.com/
-----------------------------------------------------------------

https://acp.copernicus.org/articles/24/911/2024/

*Authors*
Ryan J. Patnaude, Kathryn A. Moore, Russell J. Perkins, Thomas C. J. Hill,
Paul J. DeMott, and Sonia M. Kreidenweis

*Published: 22 Jan 2024*

*Citations*: Patnaude, R. J., Moore, K. A., Perkins, R. J., Hill, T. C. J.,
DeMott, P. J., and Kreidenweis, S. M.: Low-temperature ice nucleation of
sea spray and secondary marine aerosols under cirrus cloud conditions,
Atmos. Chem. Phys., 24, 911–928, https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-24-911-2024,
2024.

*Abstract*
Sea spray aerosols (SSAs) represent one of the most abundant aerosol types
on a global scale and have been observed at all altitudes including the
upper troposphere. SSA has been explored in recent years as a source of
ice-nucleating particles (INPs) in cirrus clouds due to the ubiquity of
cirrus clouds and the uncertainties in their radiative forcing. This study
expands upon previous works on low-temperature ice nucleation of SSA by
investigating the effects of atmospheric aging of SSA and the
ice-nucleating activity of newly formed secondary marine aerosols (SMAs)
using an oxidation flow reactor. Polydisperse aerosol distributions were
generated from a marine aerosol reference tank (MART) filled with 120 L of
real or artificial seawater and were dried to very low relative humidity to
crystallize the salt constituents of SSA prior to their subsequent
freezing, which was measured using a continuous flow diffusion chamber
(CFDC). Results show that for primary SSA (pSSA), as well as aged SSA and
SMA (aSSA+SMA) at temperatures >220 K, homogeneous conditions (92 %–97 %
relative humidity with respect to water – RHw) were required to freeze 1 %
of the particles. However, below 220 K, heterogeneous nucleation occurs for
both pSSA and aSSA+SMA at much lower RHw, where up to 1 % of the aerosol
population freezes between 75 % and 80 % RHw. Similarities between freezing
behaviors of the pSSA and aSSA+SMA at all temperatures suggest that the
contributions of condensed organics onto the pSSA or alteration of
functional groups in pSSA via atmospheric aging did not hinder the major
heterogeneous ice nucleation process at these cirrus temperatures, which
have previously been shown to be dominated by the crystalline salts.
Occurrence of a 1 % frozen fraction of SMA, generated in the absence of
primary SSA, was observed at or near water saturation below 220 K,
suggesting it is not an effective INP at cirrus temperatures, similar to
findings in the literature on other organic aerosols. Thus, any SMA
coatings on the pSSA would only decrease the ice nucleation behavior of
pSSA if the organic components were able to significantly delay water
uptake of the inorganic salts, and apparently this was not the case.
Results from this study demonstrate the ability of lofted primary sea spray
particles to remain an effective ice nucleator at cirrus temperatures, even
after atmospheric aging has occurred over a period of days in the marine
boundary layer prior to lofting. We were not able to address aging
processes under upper-tropospheric conditions.

*Source: EGU*

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"geoengineering" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/geoengineering/CAHJsh98mKPOrwFiN%2BOsM8oEQg72dv_OvaVHkPC2Ox8sEFdv%2BGg%40mail.gmail.com.

Reply via email to