A new multicomponent heterogeneous ice nucleation model and its application to Snomax bacterial particles and a Snomax-illite mineral particle mixture

被引:15
作者
Beydoun, Hassan [1 ]
Polen, Michael [1 ]
Sullivan, Ryan C. [1 ]
机构
[1] Carnegie Mellon Univ, Ctr Atmospher Particle Studies, Pittsburgh, PA 15213 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会; 美国安德鲁·梅隆基金会;
关键词
IMMERSION FREEZING BEHAVIOR; MIXED-PHASE CLOUDS; BIOLOGICAL PARTICLES; DUST PARTICLES; PRECIPITATION; TERRESTRIAL; PROTEIN; NUCLEI;
D O I
10.5194/acp-17-13545-2017
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Some biological particles, such as Snomax, are very active ice nucleating particles, inducing heterogeneous freezing in supercooled water at temperatures above -15 and up to -2 degrees C. Despite their exceptional freezing abilities, large uncertainties remain regarding the atmospheric abundance of biological ice nucleating particles, and their contribution to atmospheric ice nucleation. It has been suggested that small biological ice nucleating macromolecules or fragments can be carried on the surfaces of dust and other atmospheric particles. This could combine the atmospheric abundance of dust particles with the ice nucleating strength of biological material to create strongly enhanced and abundant ice nucleating surfaces in the atmosphere, with significant implications for the budget and distribution of atmospheric ice nucleating particles, and their consequent effects on cloud microphysics and mixed-phase clouds.& para;& para;The new critical surface area "(g)over-bar" framework that was developed by Beydoun et al. (2016) is extended to produce a heterogeneous ice nucleation mixing model that can predict the freezing behavior of multicomponent particle surfaces immersed in droplets. The model successfully predicts the immersion freezing properties of droplets containing Snomax bacterial particles across a mass concentration range of 7 orders of magnitude, by treating Snomax as comprised of two distinct distributions of heterogeneous ice nucleating activity. Furthermore, the model successfully predicts the immersion freezing behavior of a low-concentration mixture of Snomax and illite mineral particles, a proxy for the biological material-dust (bio-dust) mixtures observed in atmospheric aerosols. It is shown that even at very low Snomax concentrations in the mixture, droplet freezing at higher temperatures is still determined solely by the second less active and more abundant distribution of heterogeneous ice nucleating activity of Snomax, while freezing at lower temperatures is determined solely by the heterogeneous ice nucleating activity of pure illite. This demonstrates that in this proxy system, biological ice nucleating particles do not compromise their ice nucleating activity upon mixing with dust and no new range of intermediary freezing temperatures associated with the mixture of ice nucleating particles of differing activities is produced. The study is the first to directly examine the freezing behavior of a mixture of Snomax and illite and presents the first multicomponent ice nucleation model experimentally evaluated using a wide range of ice nucleating particle concentration mixtures in droplets.
引用
收藏
页码:13545 / 13557
页数:13
相关论文
共 46 条
  • [1] Physical and chemical characterization of bioaerosols - Implications for nucleation processes
    Ariya, P. A.
    Sun, J.
    Eltouny, N. A.
    Hudson, E. D.
    Hayes, C. T.
    Kos, G.
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL REVIEWS IN PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY, 2009, 28 (01) : 1 - 32
  • [2] The importance of feldspar for ice nucleation by mineral dust in mixed-phase clouds
    Atkinson, James D.
    Murray, Benjamin J.
    Woodhouse, Matthew T.
    Whale, Thomas F.
    Baustian, Kelly J.
    Carslaw, Kenneth S.
    Dobbie, Steven
    O'Sullivan, Daniel
    Malkin, Tamsin L.
    [J]. NATURE, 2013, 498 (7454) : 355 - 358
  • [3] Laboratory-generated mixtures of mineral dust particles with biological substances: characterization of the particle mixing state and immersion freezing behavior
    Augustin-Bauditz, Stefanie
    Wex, Heike
    Denjean, Cyrielle
    Hartmann, Susan
    Schneider, Johannes
    Schmidt, Susann
    Ebert, Martin
    Stratmann, Frank
    [J]. ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2016, 16 (09) : 5531 - 5543
  • [4] Effect of particle surface area on ice active site densities retrieved from droplet freezing spectra
    Beydoun, Hassan
    Polen, Michael
    Sullivan, Ryan C.
    [J]. ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2016, 16 (20) : 13359 - 13378
  • [5] Immersion mode heterogeneous ice nucleation by an illite rich powder representative of atmospheric mineral dust
    Broadley, S. L.
    Murray, B. J.
    Herbert, R. J.
    Atkinson, J. D.
    Dobbie, S.
    Malkin, T. L.
    Condliffe, E.
    Neve, L.
    [J]. ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2012, 12 (01) : 287 - 307
  • [6] Toward a quantitative characterization of heterogeneous ice formation with lidar/radar: Comparison of CALIPSO/CloudSat with ground-based observations
    Buehl, J.
    Ansmann, A.
    Seifert, P.
    Baars, H.
    Engelmann, R.
    [J]. GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2013, 40 (16) : 4404 - 4408
  • [7] Production of ice in tropospheric clouds - A review
    Cantrell, W
    Heymsfield, A
    [J]. BULLETIN OF THE AMERICAN METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY, 2005, 86 (06) : 795 - 807
  • [8] Ubiquity of biological ice nucleators in snowfall
    Christner, Brent C.
    Morris, Cindy E.
    Foreman, Christine M.
    Cai, Rongman
    Sands, David C.
    [J]. SCIENCE, 2008, 319 (5867) : 1214 - 1214
  • [9] Dust and Biological Aerosols from the Sahara and Asia Influence Precipitation in the Western U.S.
    Creamean, Jessie M.
    Suski, Kaitlyn J.
    Rosenfeld, Daniel
    Cazorla, Alberto
    DeMott, Paul J.
    Sullivan, Ryan C.
    White, Allen B.
    Ralph, F. Martin
    Minnis, Patrick
    Comstock, Jennifer M.
    Tomlinson, Jason M.
    Prather, Kimberly A.
    [J]. SCIENCE, 2013, 339 (6127) : 1572 - 1578
  • [10] Integrating laboratory and field data to quantify the immersion freezing ice nucleation activity of mineral dust particles
    DeMott, P. J.
    Prenni, A. J.
    McMeeking, G. R.
    Sullivan, R. C.
    Petters, M. D.
    Tobo, Y.
    Niemand, M.
    Moehler, O.
    Snider, J. R.
    Wang, Z.
    Kreidenweis, S. M.
    [J]. ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2015, 15 (01) : 393 - 409