Abstract

AbstractAnthropogenic dust is an important constituent of airborne particles in the urban environment but its ice nucleation activity remains poorly investigated. Here, we studied the sources and ice nucleating properties of size‐resolved particles in the urban atmosphere under mixed‐phase cloud conditions. The heat‐resistant ice nucleating particles (INPs) unexpectedly contributed ∼70% of the supermicron INPs at temperatures below −15°C. A detailed chemical composition analysis of size‐resolved particles revealed that these INPs were associated with anthropogenic dust, such as traffic‐influenced road dust. A parameterization based on supermicron particles was developed to predict the anthropogenic dust INP concentration, given their correlations on concentration and similarity in chemical compositions. Once integrated into global models, this parameterization holds the potential to assess the contribution of anthropogenic dust to INPs on a global scale. Given the considerable presence of anthropogenic dust in the atmosphere and its significant role as INPs, we suggest it may be an important aerosol source influencing cloud microphysics and warrant further investigations.

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