Abstract

Abstract. Aerosol particles play an important role in the microphysics of clouds and hence in their likelihood to precipitate. In the changing climate already-dry areas such as the United Arab Emirates (UAE) are predicted to become even drier. Comprehensive observations of the daily and seasonal variation in aerosol particle properties in such locations are required, reducing the uncertainty in such predictions. We analyse observations from a 1-year measurement campaign at a background location in the United Arab Emirates to investigate the properties of aerosol particles in this region, study the impact of boundary layer mixing on background aerosol particle properties measured at the surface, and study the temporal evolution of the aerosol particle cloud formation potential in the region. We used in situ aerosol particle measurements to characterise the aerosol particle composition, size, number, and cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) properties; in situ SO2 measurements as an anthropogenic signature; and a long-range scanning Doppler lidar to provide vertical profiles of the horizontal wind and turbulent properties to monitor the evolution of the boundary layer. Anthropogenic sulfate dominated the aerosol particle mass composition in this location. There was a clear diurnal cycle in the surface wind direction, which had a strong impact on aerosol particle total number concentration, SO2 concentration, and black carbon mass concentration. Local sources were the predominant source of black carbon as concentrations clearly depended on the presence of turbulent mixing, with much higher values during calm nights. The measured concentrations of SO2, instead, were highly dependent on the surface wind direction as well as on the depth of the boundary layer when entrainment from the advected elevated layers occurred. The wind direction at the surface or of the elevated layer suggests that the oil refineries and the cities of Dubai and Abu Dhabi and other coastal conurbations were the remote sources of SO2. We observed new-aerosol-particle formation events almost every day (on 4 d out of 5 on average). Calm nights had the highest CCN number concentrations and lowest κ values and activation fractions. We did not observe any clear dependence of CCN number concentration and κ parameter on the height of the daytime boundary layer, whereas the activation fraction did show a slight increase with increasing boundary layer height due to the change in the shape of the aerosol particle size distribution where the relative portion of larger aerosol particles increased with increasing boundary layer height. We believe that this indicates that size is more important than chemistry for aerosol particle CCN activation at this site. The combination of instrumentation used in this campaign enabled us to identify periods when anthropogenic pollution from remote sources that had been transported in elevated layers was present and had been mixed down to the surface in the growing boundary layer.

Highlights

  • Aerosol particles have an important role in many processes in the atmosphere, such as the hydrological cycle (Ramanathan et al, 2001)

  • Profiles of calibrated attenuated backscatter coefficient were derived from the vertical profiles of corrected signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) using the telescope function determined with the method of Pentikäinen et al (2020) and the dissipation rate of turbulent kinetic energy calculated from the variability in the vertical Doppler velocities (O’Connor et al, 2010)

  • The wind direction had a strong impact on aerosol particle total number concentration, SO2 concentration, and black carbon mass concentration

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Summary

Introduction

Aerosol particles have an important role in many processes in the atmosphere, such as the hydrological cycle (Ramanathan et al, 2001). Aerosol particle–cloud processes and interactions are still poorly understood, which complicates forecasting of changes in the rainfall patterns in the future climate (IPCC, 2013). The presence of turbulent mixing is diagnosed from the dissipation rate (O’Connor et al, 2010), and the combination of attenuated backscatter coefficient, vertical velocity skewness, dissipation rate, horizontal wind, and vector wind shear is used to derive a boundary layer classification (Manninen et al, 2018). This boundary layer classification identifies the mixing layer height and identifies which regions of mixing are connected to the surface. For our purposes we assigned daytime mixing associated with convection to periods of mixing observed between 05:00 and 20:00 LT and nighttime mixing to periods of mixing observed between 20:00 and 05:00 LT

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