Abstract

Abstract. The abundance of aerosol particles and their ability to catalyze ice nucleation are key parameters to correctly understand and describe the aerosol indirect effect on the climate. Cirrus clouds strongly influence the Earth's radiative budget, but their effect is highly sensitive to their formation mechanism, which is still poorly understood. Sulfate and organics are among the most abundant aerosol components in the troposphere and have also been found in cirrus ice crystal residuals. Most of the studies on ice nucleation at cirrus cloud conditions looked at either purely inorganic or purely organic particles. However, particles in the atmosphere are mostly found as internal mixtures, the ice nucleation ability of which is not yet fully characterized. In this study, we investigated the ice nucleation ability of internally mixed particles composed of crystalline ammonium sulfate (AS) and secondary organic material (SOM) at temperatures between −50 and −65 ∘C. The SOM was generated from the ozonolysis of α-pinene. The experiments were conducted in a large cloud chamber, which also allowed us to simulate various aging processes that the particles may experience during their transport in the atmosphere, like cloud cycling and redistribution of the organic matter. We found that the ice nucleation ability of the mixed AS / SOM particles is strongly dependent on the particle morphology. Small organic mass fractions of 5 wt %–8 wt % condensed on the surface of AS crystals are sufficient to completely suppress the ice nucleation ability of the inorganic component, suggesting that the organic coating is evenly distributed on the surface of the seed particles. In this case, the ice nucleation onset increased from a saturation ratio with respect to ice Sice∼1.30 for the pure AS crystals to ≥1.45 for the SOM-coated AS crystals. However, if such SOM-coated AS crystals are subjected to the mentioned aging processes, they show an improved ice nucleation ability with the ice nucleation onset at Sice∼1.35. We suggest that the aging processes change the particle morphology. The organic matter might redistribute on the surface to form a partially engulfed structure, where the ice-nucleation-active sites of the AS crystals are no longer completely masked by the organic coating, or the morphology of the organic coating layer might transform from a compact to a porous structure. Our results underline the complexity in representing the ice nucleation ability of internally mixed particles in cloud models. They also demonstrate the need to further investigate the impact of atmospheric aging and cloud processing on the morphology and related ice nucleation ability of internally mixed particles.

Highlights

  • Cirrus clouds form in the upper troposphere and are composed of ice particles

  • We investigated the ice nucleation ability of internally mixed particles composed of crystalline ammonium sulfate (AS) and secondary organic material (SOM) at temperatures between −50 and −65 ◦C

  • We investigated the ice nucleation ability of internally mixed particles composed of crystalline ammonium sulfate and α-pinene secondary organic material

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Summary

Introduction

Cirrus clouds form in the upper troposphere and are composed of ice particles. Frequent occurrence, long persistence, and large spatial extent make their radiative effect significant for the total Earth’s energy budget (Fleming and Cox, 1974; Matus and L’Ecuyer, 2017). The microphysical and optical properties of cirrus clouds depend on the predominance of the ice formation process, which varies with atmospheric dynamics, thermodynamic conditions, and type and abundance of aerosol particles (Patnaude and Diao, 2020). Detailed knowledge of the ice formation processes is crucial to correctly formulate and model the microphysical properties of cirrus clouds and their effect on the present and future climate. This knowledge is enhanced by an increasing number of aerosol– cloud interaction studies with particles of different origins and chemical compositions, both in the field and the laboratory (Hoose and Möhler, 2012; Kanji et al, 2017)

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