Impacts of marine organic emissions on low-level stratiform clouds – a large eddy simulator study
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Published:2022-08-30
Issue:16
Volume:22
Page:10971-10992
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ISSN:1680-7324
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Container-title:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Chem. Phys.
Author:
Prank MarjeORCID, Tonttila JuhaORCID, Ahola Jaakko, Kokkola HarriORCID, Kühn ThomasORCID, Romakkaniemi SamiORCID, Raatikainen TomiORCID
Abstract
Abstract. The goal of this study is to investigate the role of
organic aerosols emitted with sea spray or formed from marine gas phase
emissions of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in influencing the stability
of stratiform marine clouds. We aim to point out the processes and
drivers that could be relevant for global climate and should thus be
considered in large-scale models. We employ a large eddy simulator coupled with an
aerosol–cloud microphysical model together with different parameterizations
for emission of sea salt, primary organic aerosol, and VOCs from sea surface
and formation of secondary organic aerosol (SOA), to simulate the conditions
of the second Dynamics and Chemistry of Marine Stratocumulus observational campaign characterized by low-level
stratocumulus clouds transitioning from closed cells to drizzling open cell
structure. We find that the inclusion of sea spray emissions can both extend and
shorten the transitioning timescale between closed and open cells based on
the parameterization employed. Fine sea spray provides extra cloud
condensation nuclei (CCN) and delays the onset of drizzle as the
collision–coalescence process is slowed down due to smaller cloud droplet
mean size. The coarse mode has an opposite effect due to giant CCN (GCCN)
speeding up the drizzle formation through the enhanced collision–coalescence
processes. The balance between two processes depends on the model
parameterization employed. Compared to differences between different sea
spray parameterizations, the sensitivity of the clouds to the variations in
organic fraction of sea spray and hygroscopicity of the emitted particles is
relatively limited. However, our results show that it is important to
account for the size dependence of the sea spray organic fraction as
attributing organic emissions to coarse mode noticeably reduces the GCCN
effect. In addition, including the secondary organic aerosol formation
from VOCs can potentially have a noticeable impact, but only when emitting
the highest observed fluxes of monoterpenes. This impact is also highly
sensitive on the size distribution of the background aerosol population. SOA
production from isoprene is visible only if aqueous phase SOA production
pathways are included, and even then, the effect is lower than from
monoterpenes.
Funder
Academy of Finland Horizon 2020
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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