Chemistry of riming: the retention of organic and inorganic atmospheric trace constituents
-
Published:2017-08-16
Issue:16
Volume:17
Page:9717-9732
-
ISSN:1680-7324
-
Container-title:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Atmos. Chem. Phys.
Author:
Jost Alexander, Szakáll MiklósORCID, Diehl Karoline, Mitra Subir K., Borrmann StephanORCID
Abstract
Abstract. During free fall in clouds, ice hydrometeors such as snowflakes and ice particles grow effectively by riming, i.e., the accretion of supercooled droplets. Volatile atmospheric trace constituents dissolved in the supercooled droplets may remain in ice during freezing or may be released back to the gas phase. This process is quantified by retention coefficients. Once in the ice phase the trace constituents may be vertically redistributed by scavenging and subsequent precipitation or by evaporation of these ice hydrometeors at high altitudes. Retention coefficients of the most dominant carboxylic acids and aldehydes found in cloud water were investigated in the Mainz vertical wind tunnel under dry-growth (surface temperature less than 0 °C) riming conditions which are typically prevailing in the mixed-phase zone of convective clouds (i.e., temperatures from −16 to −7 °C and a liquid water content (LWC) of 0. 9 ± 0. 2 g m−3). The mean retention coefficients of formic and acetic acids are found to be 0. 68 ± 0. 09 and 0. 63 ± 0. 19. Oxalic and malonic acids as well as formaldehyde show mean retention coefficients of 0. 97 ± 0. 06, 0. 98 ± 0. 08, and 0. 97 ± 0. 11, respectively. Application of a semi-empirical model on the present and earlier wind tunnel measurements reveals that retention coefficients can be well interpreted by the effective Henry's law constant accounting for solubility and dissociation. A parameterization for the retention coefficients has been derived for substances whose aqueous-phase kinetics are fast compared to mass transport timescales. For other cases, the semi-empirical model in combination with a kinetic approach is suited to determine the retention coefficients. These may be implemented in high-resolution cloud models.
Funder
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
Reference75 articles.
1. Adewuyi, Y. G., Cho, S.-Y., Tsay, R.-P., and Carmichael, G. R.: Importance of formaldehyde in cloud chemistry, Atmos. Environ., 18, 2413–2420, 1984. 2. Andreae, M., Talbot, R., Berresheim, H., and Beecher, K.: Precipitation chemistry in central Amazonia, Dry season, J. Geophys. Res., 95, 16987–16999, 1990. 3. Avila, E. E., Pereyra, R. G., Castellano, N. E., and Saunders, C. P.: Ventilation coefficients for cylindrical collectors growing by riming as a function of the cloud droplet spectra, Atmos. Res., 57, 139–150, 2001. 4. Barret, M., Houdier, S., and Domine, F.: Thermodynamics of the Formaldehyde-Water and Formaldehyde-Ice Systems for Atmospheric Applications, J. Phys. Chem. A., 115, 307–317, 2011. 5. Barth, M. C., Stuart, A. L., and Skamarock, W. C.: Numerical simulations of the July 10, 1996, Stratospheric-Tropospheric Experiment: Radiation, Aerosols, and Ozone (STERAO)-Deep Convection experiment storm: Redistribution of soluble tracers, J. Geophys. Res., 106, 12381–12400, 2001.
Cited by
12 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|