Abstract

Abstract. Quantifying the impact of complex organic particles on the formation of ice crystals in clouds remains challenging, mostly due to the vast number of different sources ranging from sea spray to agricultural areas. In particular, there are many open questions regarding the ice nucleation properties of organic particles released from terrestrial sources such as decaying plant material. In this work, we present results from laboratory studies investigating the immersion freezing properties of individual organic compounds commonly found in plant tissue and complex organic aerosol particles from vegetated environments, without specifically investigating the contribution from biological particles, which may contribute to the overall ice nucleation efficiency observed at high temperatures. To characterize the ice nucleation properties of plant-related aerosol samples for temperatures between 242 and 267 K, we used the Aerosol Interaction and Dynamics in the Atmosphere (AIDA) cloud chamber and the Ice Nucleation SpEctrometer of the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (INSEKT), which is a droplet freezing assay. Individual plant components (polysaccharides, lignin, soy and rice protein) were mostly less ice active, or similarly ice active, compared to microcrystalline cellulose, which has been suggested by recent studies to be a proxy for quantifying the primary cloud ice formation caused by particles originating from vegetation. In contrast, samples from ambient sources with a complex organic matter composition (agricultural soils and leaf litter) were either similarly ice active or up to 2 orders of magnitude more ice active than cellulose. Of all individual organic plant components, only carnauba wax (i.e., lipids) showed a similarly high ice nucleation activity as that of the samples from vegetated environments over a temperature range between 245 and 252 K. Hence, based on our experimental results, we suggest considering cellulose as being representative for the average ice nucleation activity of plant-derived particles, whereas lignin and plant proteins tend to provide a lower limit. In contrast, complex biogenic particles may exhibit ice nucleation activities which are up to 2 orders of magnitude higher than observed for cellulose, making ambient plant-derived particles a potentially important contributor to the population of ice-nucleating particles in the troposphere, even though major uncertainties regarding their transport to cloud altitude remain.

Highlights

  • Ice formation in the atmosphere has a significant influence on the microphysical and radiative properties of clouds

  • Complex organic particles are emitted from terrestrial sources, with wind erosion, soil cultivation and harvesting crops as potential main drivers for emissions of organic matter associated with plant debris and decomposed residues (Funk et al, 2008; Hoffmann et al, 2008; Coz et al, 2010; Ginoux et al, 2012)

  • We used a combination of the AIDA cloud chamber and INSEKT droplet freezing experiments to cover a temperature range between 242 and 267 K

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Summary

Introduction

Ice formation in the atmosphere has a significant influence on the microphysical and radiative properties of clouds. One of the potential sources for these terrestrial INPs is agricultural areas, which may contribute between 7 % and 75 % to the regional dust burden (Ginoux et al, 2012) due to emissions driven by wind erosion and land management activities such as tilling and harvesting (Hoffmann et al 2008; Funk et al, 2008; Iturri et al, 2017) Vegetated areas are another source for complex organic aerosol particles associated with leaf detritus (Coz et al, 2010). We derived temperature-dependent parameterizations based on the ice nucleation active surface site (INAS) densities concept (Connolly et al, 2009; Niemand et al, 2012) These parameterizations were used to estimate upper limits for ambient INP concentrations for complex organic aerosols from vegetated environments

Samples
AIDA immersion freezing experiments
Droplet freezing assay studies
Ice nucleation active surface site densities
Results and discussion
Conclusions
Full Text
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