Abstract

Abstract. The heterogeneous ice nucleation ability of oxalic acid in the immersion mode has been investigated by controlled expansion cooling runs with airborne, ternary solution droplets composed of, (i), sodium chloride, oxalic acid, and water (NaCl/OA/H2O) and, (ii), sulphuric acid, oxalic acid, and water (H2SO4/OA/H2O). Polydisperse aerosol populations with median diameters ranging from 0.5–0.7 μm and varying solute concentrations were prepared. The expansion experiments were conducted in the AIDA aerosol and cloud chamber of the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology at initial temperatures of 244 and 235 K. In the ternary NaCl/OA/H2O system, solid inclusions of oxalic acid, presumably nucleated as oxalic acid dihydrate, were formed by temporarily exposing the ternary solution droplets to a relative humidity below the efflorescence point of NaCl. The matrix of the crystallised NaCl particulates triggered the precipitation of the organic crystals which later remained as solid inclusions in the solution droplets when the relative humidity was subsequently raised above the deliquescence point of NaCl. The embedded oxalic acid crystals reduced the critical ice saturation ratio required for the homogeneous freezing of pure NaCl/H2O solution droplets at a temperature of around 231 K from 1.38 to about 1.32. Aqueous solution droplets with OA inclusions larger than about 0.27 μm in diameter efficiently nucleated ice by condensation freezing when they were activated to micron-sized cloud droplets at 241 K, i.e., they froze well above the homogeneous freezing temperature of pure water droplets of about 237 K. Our results on the immersion freezing potential of oxalic acid corroborate the findings from a recent study with emulsified aqueous solutions containing crystalline oxalic acid. In those experiments, the crystallisation of oxalic acid diyhdrate was triggered by a preceding homogeneous freezing cycle with the emulsion samples. The expansion cooling cycles with ternary H2SO4/OA/H2O solution droplets were aimed to analyse whether those findings can be transferred to ice nucleation experiments with airborne oxalic acid containing aerosol particles. Under our experimental conditions, the efficiency by which the surface of homogeneously nucleated ice crystals triggered the precipitation of oxalic acid dihydrate was very low, i.e., less than one out of a hundred ice crystals that were formed by homogeneous freezing in a first expansion cooling cycle left behind an ice-active organic crystal that acted as immersion freezing nucleus in a second expansion cooling cycle.

Highlights

  • Dicarboxylic acids are ubiquitous components of the watersoluble organic fraction of the tropospheric aerosol

  • Very few ice crystals (Nice < 0.1 cm−3) have nucleated before the homogeneous freezing threshold, indicating that the aerosol population has remained in a supercooled liquid state upon cooling, i.e., immersed oxalic acid crystallites that could have acted as heterogeneous ice nuclei were not present

  • After the ice cloud from the first expansion run had evaporated, a second expansion run was started at 244 K to investigate whether the surface of the afore generated ice crystals had triggered the crystallisation of oxalic acid dihydrate from the unfrozen H2SO4/OA/H2O solutions

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Summary

Introduction

Dicarboxylic acids are ubiquitous components of the watersoluble organic fraction of the tropospheric aerosol Their contribution to the total particulate organic carbon typically ranges from 1–3 wt% in urban and semi-urban areas to up to 10 wt% in remote marine atmospheres (Kerminen et al, 2000, 1999). Oxalic acid (HOOC-COOH), malonic acid (HOOC-CH2-COOH), and succinic acid (HOOC-(CH2)2COOH) are usually the most abundant species, partly comprising more than 80% of the total diacid mass concentrations (Kawamura et al, 1996). Apart from investigating their hygroscopic behaviour and ability to act as atmospheric cloud condensation nuclei, several recent studies have addressed the ice nucleation potential of solid low-molecular weight dicarboxylic acids. At typical tropospheric relative humidities, diacids of low water solubility like oxalic and succinic

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