https://essopenarchive.org/doi/full/10.22541/essoar.171926549.92645374/v1

*Àuthors*
Sandro Vattioni,Sina K Käslin,John A Dykema,Luo Beiping,Timofei
Sukhodolov,Jan Sedlacek,Frank Keutsch,Thomas Peter,Gabriel Chiodo

*24 June 2024*

*Citations*: Sandro Vattioni, Sina K Käslin, John A Dykema, et al.
Microphysical interactions determine the effectiveness of Solar Radiation
Modification via Stratospheric Solid Particle Injection. ESS Open Archive .
June 24, 2024.
DOI: 10.22541/essoar.171926549.92645374/v1

*Abstract*
Recent studies have suggested that stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI) of
solid particles for climate intervention could reduce stratospheric warming
compared to injection of SO2.
However, interactions of microphysical processes, such as settling and
coagulation of solid particles, with stratospheric dynamics have not been
considered.
Using a global chemistry-climate model with interactive solid particle
microphysics, we show that agglomeration significantly reduces the
backscatter efficiency per unit of burden compared to mono-disperse
particles, partly due to faster settling of the agglomerates, but mainly
due to increased forward- over backscattering with increasing agglomerate
size.
Compared to injection of SO2, injection of 150\,nm radius diamond particles
still substantially reduces required injection rates as well as
perturbation of stratospheric winds, age of air and water vapor
concentrations due to the small stratospheric warming per radiative
forcing. Uncertainties remain as to whether stratospheric dispersion of
solid particles is feasible without formation of agglomerates.

*Source: ESS OPEN ARCHIVE *

-- 
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/CAHJsh9-LJyG2Qu6i2qK6XbtAgM3-34PnyDNHV%3DgxUSxaxMHvSw%40mail.gmail.com.

Reply via email to