Abstract

Abstract. Balloon-borne water vapour measurements in the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere (UTLS) by means of frost point hygrometers provide important information on air chemistry and climate. However, the risk of contamination from sublimating hydrometeors collected by the intake tube may render these measurements unusable, particularly after crossing low clouds containing supercooled droplets. A large set of (sub)tropical measurements during the 2016–2017 StratoClim balloon campaigns at the southern slopes of the Himalayas allows us to perform an in-depth analysis of this type of contamination. We investigate the efficiency of wall contact and freezing of supercooled droplets in the intake tube and the subsequent sublimation in the UTLS using computational fluid dynamics (CFD). We find that the airflow can enter the intake tube with impact angles up to 60∘, owing to the pendulum motion of the payload. Supercooled droplets with radii > 70 µm, as they frequently occur in mid-tropospheric clouds, typically undergo contact freezing when entering the intake tube, whereas only about 50 % of droplets with 10 µm radius freeze, and droplets < 5 µm radius mostly avoid contact. According to CFD, sublimation of water from an icy intake can account for the occasionally observed unrealistically high water vapour mixing ratios (χH2O > 100 ppmv) in the stratosphere. Furthermore, we use CFD to differentiate between stratospheric water vapour contamination by an icy intake tube and contamination caused by outgassing from the balloon and payload, revealing that the latter starts playing a role only during ascent at high altitudes (p < 20 hPa).

Highlights

  • Sources of contamination for cryogenic frost point hygrometers are water vapour outgassing from the balloon envelope, the parachute, the nylon cord, or sublimation of hydrometeors collected in the intake tube of the instrument (Hall et al, 2016; Vömel et al, 2016)

  • As we show below by means of computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations, the passage through clouds containing supercooled water leads to hardly any collisions of the droplets with the walls of the intake tube, if the airflow is parallel to the walls

  • We investigated the potential contamination of water vapour measurements made by the Cryogenic Frost point Hygrometer (CFH) during the 2016–2017 StratoClim balloon campaigns at the southern slopes of the Himalayas

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Sources of contamination for cryogenic frost point hygrometers are water vapour outgassing from the balloon envelope, the parachute, the nylon cord, or sublimation of hydrometeors collected in the intake tube of the instrument (Hall et al, 2016; Vömel et al, 2016). These are contamination sources common to all balloon-borne water vapour measurement techniques (Goodman and Chleck, 1971; Vömel et al, 2007c; Khaykin et al, 2013). Descent data are not always an option because some instrument intakes and control systems are optimized for ascent (Kämpfer, 2013)

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call