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ICCP Workshop on Measurements of Ice in Clouds. Topic 8: Composition of Ice Nuclei Co- Leaders: Zamin Kanji & Heike Wex Contributors: Yvonne Boose , Paul DeMott Andrea Flossmann , and Martin Gallagher July 5-6, 2013, ETH - Zürich. Motivation for Studying IN Composition.
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ICCP Workshop on Measurements of Ice in Clouds • Topic 8: • Composition of Ice Nuclei • Co- Leaders: Zamin Kanji & Heike Wex • Contributors: Yvonne Boose, Paul DeMott • Andrea Flossmann, and Martin Gallagher • July 5-6, 2013, ETH - Zürich
Motivation for Studying IN Composition • Surface composition will influence functional group interaction with water/vapour (Pruppacher and Klett, 1997) • Clear-air particles subjected to known ice formation conditions show compositional bias toward freezing mechanisms (DeMott et al. 2003) Hom. reg. T < -38 °C, Het. reg. T > -38 °C. Storm Peak, PCVI to select IC and PALMS for composition
Motivation for Studying IN Composition Pure organic IN contained evidence of oxidation Raman Spectroscopy, Coarse Mode >2µm, mode size 4 ±1.5µm AvgSice = 1.04 ± 0.05 and independent of T 210 - 230 K PALMS, Fine Mode <2µm, T = 230 ± 1 K Sice= 1.4 ± 0.05 Majority of particles in both modes are internally mixed with organics
Ice Forming Mechanism InferredNot Detected In-situ • The study of Ice Nuclei (IN) composition allows inference of ice forming mechanism • Soluble material vs insoluble species • Characterizing ice crystal (IC) properties such as size, and number densities within a cloud also suggests potential mechanism by which cloud is formed • Smaller crystals vs. larger crystals • Lower IN# vs. higher IN# • Homogeneous vs. Heterogeneous ice nucleation
Ice Crystal Property Characterization From Cziczo and Froyd (2013, in review)
Measurement Sites for IN and Ice Residuals (IRs) • Mountain top sites - Jungfraujoch Station, Switzerland • High altitude stations - Storm Peak, Colorado, USA • In-flight sampling in-cloud and compared to clear air particles using CVI to sample IRs • Impaction to collect on filter or EM grids (offline) • Morphology and cold stage ice nucleation studies • CVI, Phase seperator (on ground) – to sample IRs in mixed-phase clouds
Counter Virtual Flow (CVI) Sampling From Cziczo and Froyd (2013, in review)
Types Of Ice Clouds/Cirrus From Cziczo and Froyd (2013, in review)
Techniques Used For Compositional Analysis of Irs/IN • IR flow directed into single particle instruments • In – situ: Single Particle Mass Spectrometry or Soot Photometry • Particle Analysis by Laser Mass Spectrometry (PALMS) • Aerosol Time of Flight Mass Spectrometry (ATOFMS) • Particle Soot Absorption Photometer (PSAP) • Offline: Electron Microscopy (EM) for imaging and morphology with Energy Dispersive X-ray (EDX) spectroscopy for compositional analysis
Classes of IN detected (offline) in Atmosphere in Contrails or Cirrus
Heitzenberg et al. (1996): First composition measurements of Cirrus IRs • Southern Germany and Austrian Alps • CVI – EM/EDX (morphology and composition) • CVI: IC# < 3000/L and diameter up to 25 µm • Cloud Probe IC#: 1- 10/L, IC size: 20 – 600 µm • 84 IRs , Dmed = 1 µm, only IRs>0.12 µm analysed • Sampling leg - IC# 90/L • Composition similar to mineral, but Fe enriched compared to interstitial or out-of-cloud mineral particles • Pitting of inlet by ice crystals – not considered
Twohy and Gandrud (1998): Two contrails • South and north-western USA • CVI lower cutpoint 5-14 µm • IRs collected on 2-stage impactor (AEM) • 0.1-0.42 and >0.42 µm (Da, d = 1.8g/cm-3) • Total IR 12000/L • Non-Volatile (heated to 250 °C) 9000/L • Part of CVI flow on EM grids for X-ray spectr. • 76 particles from Boeing 757 and 36 from NASA DC-8 • SS and Ti particles (from inlet pitting?)
Composition of IN detected (offline) • Twohy and Gandrud (1998) • Minerals mostly and metals partly intern. mixed withsulfur • Unid. non-vol: could be silicates (not identified, EM grids) • 757 contrail was cirrus free, DC-8 probably contained natural cirrus
Twohy and Poellot (2005): Anvil Cirrus CloudsCRYSTAL-FACE • Southern USA (Florida) • CVI cut points not reported • IRs collected on 2-stage impactor (SEM) • 0.07-0.38 and >0.38 µm (Da, d = 1.7g/cm-3) • IR 30 - 300/L • 1115 IRs and 400 ambient particles analysed • Composition with EDX • Cloud probe data over counted ice crystals by an order of magnitude due to shattering • Compositional artifacts due to SS pitting (<2%)
Composition of IN detected (offline) • Presence of salts in IRs-hom. frez. • Int. mixing of salts with carbon, likely biomass burning • Not clear if soot IRs due due to scavenging or ice formation • Is IN comp. And sampling T data enough to elucidate freezing mech.? Twohy and Poellot (2005) • Do we need to combine, radar data and/or detailed modelling with in-situ studies to determine formation mechanism?
Taragino et al. (2006): 6 Flights, Cold Orographic Cirrus • North Atlantic, UK, North America, Western Russia • Cloud temperature > - 35 °C, Alt. 5 – 8 km • CVI cut points 4 – 55 µm (Noone, et al. 1992) • 609 IRs and classified into sub- and super-micron groups • Composition and size/morphology with SEM/EDX • 19.5% Al-Si rich and 24.1% Fe rich MD • 23.3% presumed organic and 6.7% sea salt • 7% with SS signatures considered IRs and 3% SS contamination
Cziczo et al. (2013), MACPEX, Anvil and Synoptic Cirrus • Houston, Texas • Advanced CVI with Ne counter flow • Increased heat transfer and viscosity • Longer stopping distance • Inline laser to sublimate crystals • Composition and size/morphology with SEM/EDX • 433 IRs with size mode 0.3 – 0.5 µm • Supersaturationwrt ice near cirrus 120-140% • Cloud probe IC# < 200/L • Het. freezing inferred to be dominant
Composition of IN detected (offline) • Only one case of a cloud formed from hom. freez. cloud observed during MACPEX Cziczo et al. (2013)
Classes of IN detected (in-situ) in Atmosphere in Contrails or Cirrus
Ström and Ohlsson (1998), Contrails • Southern Germany, 5 flights • CVI –and diameter up to 60 µm • Absorbing aerosol detected using particle soot absorption photometer • Higher ice crystal densities in areas with increased mass of absorbing particles • Enhanced ratio of IC# to particle number ranged between 1.6 – 2.8 • Does this mean BC causes enhanced ice nucleation, or scavenging processes played a role?
Cziczo et al. (2004), Cirrus Anvils, 12 Flights(CRYSTAL-FACE) • 2 flights encountered the Saharan Air Layer (SAL) • First study to use SPMS with CVI • CVI range 5 – 22 µm and IRs 0.2 – 2 µm with IR mode between 0.3 – 1 µm (larger particles corresponding to SAL) • Out-of-cloud (2126) and interstitial (299) observed to be >95% sulphate/organic/biomass • IRs (211) 9 of 12 flights were >60% mineral dust/fly ash and sea salt, 2 flights in SAL >60% mineral dust, 1 flight (127) with IRs mostly sulphate/organics/biomass was consistent with hom. freez.
Cziczo et al. (2004), Cirrus Anvils, 12 Flights(CRYSTAL-FACE) Taken from Cziczo et al. (2013) Composition aids in inference of dominant mechanism forming the cirrus cloud
Pratt et al. (2009), 1 Orographic Cloud • Wyoming, altitude ~ 8km, temp of -31 to -34 °C • CVI lower cut point 7 µm diameter • Composition obtained by A-ATOFMS • 46 IRs sampled between 0.14 – 0.7 µm diameter • Biological material, inferred from the presence of organic carbon, nitrogen and phosphate • Biological and mineral dust IRs enhanced by a factor of 3 compared to particle composition in clear air • Het. ice formation or preferential scavenging suggested
Composition of IN detected (in-situ) • a) Biological b) Mineral Dust Pratt et al. (2009)
Froyd et al. (2010), Subvisual Cirrus • Tropical Tropopause (over Costa Rica) • CVI with gold plating, IC range 5 – 25 µm diameter • IC# < 50/L, cloud probe designed for reduced shatter • 127 IRs compared to 873 Interstitial aerosol • Composition suggests hom. frez. but IC# not typical of hom. freez.
Froyd et al. (2010), Subvisual Cirrus • Het. frez. of anhydrous salts and/or glassy organic aerosols maybe playing a role • Gold plated CVI was succesfully used to show that ambient particles mixed with gold was produced as an artifact • Spectral feature attributed to inlet was minor Inlet plating modification successfully allows us to correct/report IRs chemical composition
Cziczo et al. (2013) • BC not important for Het. cirrus cloud formation • Biological particles not implied in cirrus particles • 94% of cloud encounters inferred to form through het. ice nucleation
Type of Information Collected/Inferred(answered (?) questions) • Basic composition classes • IRs with signatures showing more than one class of compounds • Internally mixed before ice nucleation • Scavenging after ice nucleation? • Ice formation mechanism inferred • Composition information combined with ice crystal properties • IR size distributions • Truly reflective of IN or biased due to scavenging • IC Size distributions
Challenges With Current Techniques Ice crystal size limitation – missing larger diameter crystals due to CVI upper limit cut point
Limitations of Current Methods • Hard to sample mixed-phase cloud IRs • Phase seperator needed for aircraft • Multiplication and shattering on inlet (overcome?) • Inlet material contamination in IR composition (overcome?) • Small particles captured in wake of ice crystal • Re-suspension of particles adhered to inlet when sampling ice crystals • Lower size limit of EM/EDX (120 nm) and SPMS (100-200 nm)
Type of Data Desired but not Collected(unanswered questions) • In-situ detection of ice crystals in mixed phase clouds, i.e. Which particles remain immersed vs those that induce freezing? • Current studies limited to ground sites that encounter mixed phase clouds • Large ice crystals not sampled – what is the composition of IR in these crystals – likely het IN? • In-cloud sampling occurs well after ice nucleation • Specific conditions for ice nucleation are not measured in aircraft studies • In Cirrus can we distinguish between one or more of the het. ice nucleation mechanism e.g. deposition vs. immersion?
Anticipated Challenges for Future IN Composition Measurements • Develop phase-separator that can fly in mixed-phase clouds? • Measurements of near cloud RH/out-of-cloud RH are challenging but important to help decipher ice forming mechanism • Modification of CVI to include sampling of IR from large 2nd mode of anvil cirrus crystals? • Develop inlet with longer stopping distance to allow enough sublimation? Or different gas (neon), different folding design? (used in MACPEX)
Role of Laboratory Studies in Aiding Such Measurements • Understanding the roles of how the various classes of compounds detected in the field nucleate ice – i.e. Temp, RH, and Mode? • But run into other factors, size, morphology, instrument techniques detection method, make reporting of composition influence complicated • Compositions used in the lab, how realistic are they?