Abstract

Abstract. During the summertime, dust from the Sahara can be efficiently transported westwards within the Saharan air layer (SAL). This can lead to high aerosol loadings being observed above a relatively clean marine boundary layer (MBL) in the tropical Atlantic Ocean. These dust layers can impart significant radiative effects through strong visible and IR light absorption and scattering, and can also have indirect impacts by altering cloud properties. The processing of the dust aerosol can result in changes in both direct and indirect radiative effects, leading to significant uncertainty in climate prediction in this region. During August 2015, measurements of aerosol and cloud properties were conducted off the coast of west Africa as part of the Ice in Cloud Experiment – Dust (ICE-D) and AERosol properties – Dust (AER-D) campaigns. Observations were obtained over a 4-week period using the UK Facility for Atmospheric Airborne Measurements (FAAM) BAe 146 aircraft based on Santiago Island, Cabo Verde. Ground-based observations were collected from Praia (14∘57′ N, 23∘29′ W; 100 m a.s.l.), also located on Santiago Island. The dust in the SAL was mostly sampled in situ at altitudes of 2–4 km, and the potential dust age was estimated by backward trajectory analysis. The particle mass concentration (at diameter d = 0.1–20 µm) decreased with transport time. Mean effective diameter (Deff) for supermicron SAL dust (d = 1–20 µm) was found to be 5–6 µm regardless of dust age, whereas submicron Deff (d = 0.1–1 µm) showed a decreasing trend with longer transport. For the first time, an airborne laser-induced incandescence instrument (the single particle soot photometer – SP2) was deployed to measure the hematite content of dust. For the Sahel-influenced dust in the SAL, the observed hematite mass fraction of dust (FHm) was found to be anti-correlated with the single scattering albedo (SSA, λ = 550 nm, for particles d < 2.5 µm); as potential dust age increased from 2 to 7 days, FHm increased from 2.5 to 4.5 %, SSA decreased from 0.97 to 0.93 and the derived imaginary part (k) of the refractive index at 550 nm increased from 0.0015 to 0.0035. However, the optical properties of Sahara-influenced plumes (not influenced by the Sahel) were independent of dust age and hematite content with SSA ∼ 0.95 and k ∼ 0.0028. This indicates that the absorbing component of dust may be source dependent, or that gravitational settling of larger particles may lead to a higher fraction of more absorbing clay–iron aggregates at smaller sizes. Mie calculation using the measured size distribution and size-resolved refractive indices of the absorbing components (black carbon and hematite) reproduces the measured SSA to within ±0.02 for SAL dust by assuming a goethite ∕ hematite mass ratio of 2. Overall, hematite and goethite constituted 40–80 % of the absorption for particles d < 2.5 µm, and black carbon (BC) contributed 10–37 %. This highlights the importance of size-dependent composition in determining the optical properties of dust and also the contribution from BC within dust plumes.

Highlights

  • Saharan dust in northern Africa contributes the majority of the aerosol optical depth (AOD) and produces significant uncertainty in the prediction of climatic effects in this region

  • The transport of Saharan dust to the eastern tropical Atlantic is significantly controlled by the Azores high pressure system, which leads to persistent northeasterly trade winds along the coast of northwestern Africa (Carpenter et al, 2010)

  • To be consistent with aircraft measurement, the submicron Deff is calculated over the same range (0.1–1 μm), but for the supermicron mode it is calculated over a smaller range (1-10 μm) which is within the detectable size range of the instruments and sampling line cut-off size

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Summary

Introduction

Saharan dust in northern Africa contributes the majority of the aerosol optical depth (AOD) and produces significant uncertainty in the prediction of climatic effects in this region. The SAL can be transported thousands of kilometres westwards towards the Caribbean basin (Tsamalis et al, 2013; Knippertz and Todd, 2012; Prospero and Carlson, 1972) This hot, dry, sometimes dust-rich SAL creates a stable layer and overlies the cooler, more humid surface of the tropical Atlantic marine boundary layer (MBL), and the resulting strong temperature inversion may often suppress the convection originating in the marine layer (Wong et al, 2009). The particle size determines the distance over which dust is transported and its deposition rate, and its impact on regional climate through changes in atmospheric circulation, surface air temperature and precipitation. The properties of aerosols in this region deposited on the ground were investigated through the month-long ground-based measurement experiment at Praia International Airport, Santiago Island These experiments provide a comprehensive dataset to investigate the SAL dust properties during the summer season

Overview of the instruments
The aerosol size distribution
The hematite content of dust aerosol
Composition of aerosol
Size distributions
Optical properties
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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