Abstract

Abstract. The aerosol-driven radiative effects on marine low-level cloud represent a large uncertainty in climate simulations, in particular over the Southern Ocean, which is also an important region for sea spray aerosol production. Observations of sea spray aerosol organic enrichment and the resulting impact on water uptake over the remote Southern Hemisphere are scarce, and therefore the region is under-represented in existing parameterisations. The Surface Ocean Aerosol Production (SOAP) voyage was a 23 d voyage which sampled three phytoplankton blooms in the highly productive water of the Chatham Rise, east of New Zealand. In this study we examined the enrichment of organics to nascent sea spray aerosol and the modifications to sea spray aerosol water uptake using in situ chamber measurements of seawater samples taken during the SOAP voyage. Primary marine organics contributed up to 23 % of the sea spray mass for particles with diameter less than approximately 1 µm and up to 79 % of the particle volume for 50 nm diameter sea spray. The composition of the submicron organic fraction was consistent throughout the voyage and was largely composed of a polysaccharide-like component, characterised by very low alkane-to-hydroxyl-concentration ratios of approximately 0.1–0.2. The enrichment of organics was compared to the output from the chlorophyll-a-based sea spray aerosol parameterisation suggested by Gantt et al. (2011) and the OCEANFILMS (Organic Compounds from Ecosystems to Aerosols: Natural Films and Interfaces via Langmuir Molecular Surfactants) models. OCEANFILMS improved on the representation of the organic fraction predicted using chlorophyll a, in particular when the co-adsorption of polysaccharides was included; however, the model still under-predicted the proportion of polysaccharides by an average of 33 %. Nascent 50 nm diameter sea spray aerosol hygroscopic growth factors measured at 90 % relative humidity averaged 1.93±0.08 and did not decrease with increasing sea spray aerosol organic fractions. The observed hygroscopicity was greater than expected from the assumption of full solubility, particularly during the most productive phytoplankton bloom (B1), during which organic fractions were greater than approximately 0.4. The water uptake behaviour observed in this study is consistent with that observed for other measurements of phytoplankton blooms and can be partially attributed to the presence of sea salt hydrates, which lowers the sea spray aerosol hygroscopicity when the organic enrichment is low. The inclusion of surface tension effects only marginally improved the modelled hygroscopicity, and a significant discrepancy between the observed and modelled hygroscopicity at high organic volume fractions remained. The findings from the SOAP voyage highlight the influence of biologically sourced organics on sea spray aerosol composition; these data improve the capacity to parameterise sea spray aerosol organic enrichment and water uptake.

Highlights

  • Aerosol–cloud interactions represent a large uncertainty in modelled radiative forcing (Myhre et al, 2013), and in particular a strong radiative bias has been associated with underrepresentation of low-level cloud over the Southern Ocean (Bodas-Salcedo et al, 2012; Protat et al, 2017)

  • Sea spray aerosol (SSA) measurements are scarce in the Southern Hemisphere (Cravigan et al, 2015); parameterisations of SSA organic enrichment have largely been developed based on Northern Hemisphere measurements

  • Chamber measurements of primary marine aerosol generated from 23 seawater samples collected across three phytoplankton blooms tracked during the 23 d Surface Ocean Aerosol Production (SOAP) voyage over the Chatham Rise are examined in this study

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Summary

Introduction

Aerosol–cloud interactions represent a large uncertainty in modelled radiative forcing (Myhre et al, 2013), and in particular a strong radiative bias has been associated with underrepresentation of low-level cloud over the Southern Ocean (Bodas-Salcedo et al, 2012; Protat et al, 2017). For example the drivers of an observed positive correlation between modelled SSA organic mass fraction and cloud droplet number concentrations over the high-latitude Southern Ocean are unclear (McCoy et al, 2015). Models of SSA organic enrichment are largely based on chamber measurements which relate SSA and seawater composition. SSA measurements are scarce in the Southern Hemisphere (Cravigan et al, 2015); parameterisations of SSA organic enrichment have largely been developed based on Northern Hemisphere measurements. Further constraint of these relationships to observations for the Southern Hemisphere is required

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