A Comparison of Low-Cost Collector Configurations for Quantifying Ice Accretion

Author:

Campbell John L.1,Rustad Lindsey E.1,Garlick Sarah2,Newman Noah3,Stanovick John S.4,Halm Ian5,Driscoll Charles T.6,Barjenbruch Brian L.7,Burakowski Elizabeth8,Hilberg Steven D.3,Sanders Kristopher J.9,Shafer Jason C.10,Doesken Nolan J.3

Affiliation:

1. a USDA Forest Service Northern Research Station, Durham, New Hampshire

2. b Hubbard Brook Research Foundation, Woodstock, Vermont

3. c CoCoRaHS, Colorado Climate Center, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado

4. d USDA Forest Service Northern Research Station, Newtown Square, Pennsylvania

5. e USDA Forest Service Northern Research Station, North Woodstock, New Hampshire

6. f Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York

7. g NOAA/National Weather Service, Valley, Nebraska

8. h Institute for the Study of Earth, Oceans, and Space, University of New Hampshire, Durham, New Hampshire

9. i NOAA/National Weather Service, Grand Junction, Colorado

10. j Department of Atmospheric Sciences, Northern Vermont University, Lyndon, Vermont

Abstract

AbstractIce storms are important winter weather events that can have substantial environmental, economic, and social impacts. Mapping and assessment of damage after these events could be improved by making ice accretion measurements at a greater number of sites than is currently available. There is a need for low-cost collectors that can be distributed broadly in volunteer observation networks; however, use of low-cost collectors necessitates understanding of how collector characteristics and configurations influence measurements of ice accretion. A study was conducted at the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest in New Hampshire that involved spraying water over passive ice collectors during freezing conditions to simulate ice storms of different intensity. The collectors consisted of plates composed of four different materials and installed horizontally; two different types of wires strung horizontally; and rods of three different materials, with three different diameters, and installed at three different inclinations. Results showed that planar ice thickness on plates was 2.5–3 times as great as the radial ice thickness on rods or wires, which is consistent with expectations based on theory and empirical evidence from previous studies. Rods mounted on an angle rather than horizontally reduced the formation of icicles and enabled more consistent measurements. Results such as these provide much needed information for comparing ice accretion data. Understanding of relationships among collector configurations could be refined further by collecting data from natural ice storms under a broader range of weather conditions.

Funder

Directorate for Biological Sciences

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

Reference63 articles.

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