The impact of aerosol size-dependent hygroscopicity and mixing state on the cloud condensation nuclei potential over the north-east Atlantic
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Published:2021-06-08
Issue:11
Volume:21
Page:8655-8675
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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:
Xu WeiORCID, Fossum Kirsten N., Ovadnevaite Jurgita, Lin Chunshui, Huang Ru-Jin, O'Dowd Colin, Ceburnis Darius
Abstract
Abstract. We present an aerosol cloud condensation nuclei (CCN)
closure study over the north-east Atlantic Ocean using six approximating
methods. The CCN number concentrations (NCCN) were measured at four
discrete supersaturations (SSs; 0.25 %, 0.5 %, 0.75 % and 1.0 %). Concurrently,
aerosol number size distribution, sub-saturation hygroscopic growth factor
and bulk PM1 chemical composition were obtained at matching time
resolution and after a careful data validation exercise. Method A used a
constant bulk hygroscopicity parameter κ of 0.3; method B used bulk
PM1 chemical composition measured by an aerosol mass spectrometer
(AMS); method C utilised a single growth factor (GF) size (165 nm) measured
by a humidified tandem differential mobility analyser (HTDMA); method D
utilised size-dependent GFs measured at 35, 50, 75, 110 and 165 nm; method E
divided the aerosol population into three hygroscopicity modes
(near-hydrophobic, more-hygroscopic and sea-salt modes), and the total CCN
number in each mode was cumulatively added up; method F used the full-size-scale GF probability density function (GF–PDF) in the most complex approach.
The studied periods included high-biological-activity and low-biological-activity seasons in clean marine and polluted continental air masses to
represent and discuss the most contrasting aerosol populations. Overall, a good agreement was found between estimated and measured NCCN
with linear regression slopes ranging from 0.64 to 1.6. The temporal
variability was captured very well, with Pearson's R value ranging from 0.76
to 0.98 depending on the method and air mass type. We further compared the
results of using different methods to quantify the impact of size-dependent
hygroscopicity and mixing state and found that ignoring size-dependent
hygroscopicity induced overestimation of NCCN by up to 12 %, and
ignoring a mixing state induced overestimation of NCCN by up to 15 %. The error induced by assuming an internal mixing in highly polluted
cases was largely eliminated by dividing the full GF–PDF into three
conventional hygroscopic modes, while assuming an internal mixing in clean
marine aerosol did not induce significant error.
Funder
Science Foundation Ireland Environmental Protection Agency China Scholarship Council
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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