Abstract

Abstract. A global model of aerosol microphysics is used to simulate a large East Asian dust storm during the ACE-Asia experiment. We use the model together with size resolved measurements of aerosol number concentration and composition to examine how dust modified the production of sulfate aerosol and the particle size distribution in East Asian outflow. Simulated size distributions and mass concentrations of dust, sub- and super-micron sulfate agree well with observations from the C-130 aircraft. Modeled mass concentrations of fine sulfate (Dp<1.3 μm) decrease by ~10% due to uptake of sulfur species onto super-micron dust. We estimate that dust enhanced the mass concentration of coarse sulfate (Dp>1.0 μm) by more than an order of magnitude, but total sulfate concentrations increase by less than 2% because decreases in fine sulfate have a compensating effect. Our analysis shows that the sulfate associated with dust can be explained largely by the uptake of H2SO4 rather than reaction of SO2 on the dust surface, which we assume is suppressed once the particles are coated in sulfate. We suggest that many previous model investigations significantly overestimated SO2 oxidation on East Asian dust, possibly due to the neglect of surface saturation effects. We extend previous model experiments by examining how dust modified existing particle concentrations in Asian outflow. Total particle concentrations (condensation nuclei, CN) modeled in the dust-pollution plume are reduced by up to 20%, but we predict that dust led to less than 10% depletion in particles large enough to act as cloud condensation nuclei (CCN). Our analysis suggests that E. Asian dust storms have only a minor impact on sulfate particles present at climate-relevant sizes.

Highlights

  • The Gobi (China/Mongolia) and Taklimakan (China) deserts are the most important sources of dust in E

  • We estimate the mass concentration of dust sampled in each C-130 flight from size-resolved measurements of particle number concentration obtained by the Thermo-Optic Aerosol Discriminator (TOAD), which operated over a particle size range of 120 nm to 12 μm diameter

  • Size resolved measurements of aerosol number and mass were obtained on the C-130 aircraft, providing detailed information on the characteristics of sulfate present in Figure Fig. 9

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Summary

Introduction

The Gobi (China/Mongolia) and Taklimakan (China) deserts are the most important sources of dust in E. Lee et al (2009) studied dust impacts on global CCN using the GISS-TOMAS global microphysical model and found that total CCN over dust source regions either doubled or decreased by as much as 20% depending on the size distribution of dust emissions They did not consider heterogeneous oxidation of SO2 on dust and did not examine how these interactions modified the production and size distribution of sulfate. GLOMAP-bin allows the impacts of dust on the sulfate size distribution to be simulated in more detail than previous models used to examine the ACE-Asia campaign (e.g., Tang et al, 2004a, b). Previous studies by examining how the dust storm modified the CN and CCN number concentrations observed

Model description
The GLOMAP-bin model
Emissions
Simulation of mineral dust
Heterogeneous chemistry on dust
Model setup
Observations and analysis statistics
Dust during observation periods
Fine sulfate during observation periods
Regional impacts of dust on total sulfate
Analysis of particle number concentrations
Regional impacts of dust on CN
Regional impacts on CCN-sized particles
Findings
Conclusions
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