Abstract

Abstract. Condensation trails (contrails) formed from water vapor emissions behind aircraft engines are the most uncertain components of the aviation impacts on climate change. To gain improved knowledge of contrail and contrail-induced cirrus cloud formation, understanding of contrail ice particle formation immediately after aircraft engines is needed. Despite many efforts spent in modeling the microphysics of ice crystal formation in jet regime (with a plume age <5 s), systematic understanding of parametric effects of variables affecting contrail ice particle formation is still limited. In this work, we apply a microphysical parcel modeling approach to study contrail ice particle formation in near-field aircraft plumes up to 1000 m downstream of an aircraft engine in the soot-rich regime (soot number emission index >1×1015 (kg-fuel)−1) at cruise. The effects of dilution history, ion-mediated nucleation, ambient relative humidity, fuel sulfur contents, and initial soot emissions were investigated. Our simulation results suggest that ice particles are mainly formed by water condensation on emitted soot particles. The growth of ice coated soot particles is driven by water vapor emissions in the first 1000 m and by ambient relative humidity afterwards. The presence of chemi-ions does not significantly contribute to the formation of ice particles in the soot-rich regime, and the effect of fuel sulfur contents is small over the range typical of standard jet fuels. The initial properties of soot emissions play the most critical role, and our calculations suggest that higher number concentration and smaller size of contrail particle nuclei may be able to effectively suppress the formation of contrail ice particles. Further modeling and experimental studies are needed to verify if our findings can provide a possible approach for contrail mitigation.

Highlights

  • Environmental concerns over aviation emissions on the current and projected climate change have increased as air traffic and aviation industry continue to grow (Wuebbles, 2006)

  • Our calculations suggest that ice particles are mainly formed by water condensation on emitted soot particles in this regime

  • The growth of ice coated soot particles is more rapid in the 100 m downstream of an engine and is driven by water emissions

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Summary

Introduction

Environmental concerns over aviation emissions on the current and projected climate change have increased as air traffic and aviation industry continue to grow (Wuebbles, 2006). Contrails are formed under certain thermodynamic constraints (Schmidt, 1941; Appleman, 1953; Schumann, 2005) and can evolve into cirrus clouds under favorable conditions (Minnis et al, 2004) Both contrails and contrail-induced cirrus clouds could play important roles in the global climate change via affecting the radiation budget. Miake-Lye: Parametric studies of contrail ice particle formation in jet regime such as global climate models or large eddy simulations (Shirgaonkar and Lele, 2006) This information can only be obtained via modeling due to instrumental limitations in near-field aircraft plumes within five wingspans downstream (∼1 s) of an aircraft engine.

Microphysical model for ice particle formation
Representative modeling results and model validation
Effects of dilution history
Effects of ion-mediated nucleation
Effects of ambient relative humidity and fuel sulfur contents
Effects of soot emissions
Conclusions
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