The Fifth International Workshop on Ice Nucleation phase 2 (FIN-02): laboratory intercomparison of ice nucleation measurements

被引:86
作者
DeMott, Paul J. [1 ]
Moehler, Ottmar [2 ]
Cziczo, Daniel J. [3 ,4 ]
Hiranuma, Naruki [2 ,18 ]
Petters, Markus D. [5 ]
Petters, Sarah S. [5 ,19 ]
Belosi, Franco [6 ]
Bingemer, Heinz G. [7 ]
Brooks, Sarah D. [8 ]
Budke, Carsten [9 ]
Burkert-Kohn, Monika [10 ]
Collier, Kristen N. [8 ]
Danielczok, Anja [7 ,20 ]
Eppers, Oliver [11 ]
Felgitsch, Laura [12 ]
Garimella, Sarvesh [3 ,21 ]
Grothe, Hinrich [12 ]
Herenz, Paul [13 ]
Hill, Thomas C. J. [1 ]
Hoehler, Kristina [2 ]
Kanji, Zamin A. [10 ]
Kiselev, Alexei [2 ]
Koop, Thomas [9 ]
Kristensen, Thomas B. [13 ,22 ]
Krueger, Konstantin [2 ,7 ]
Kulkarni, Gourihar [14 ]
Levin, Ezra J. T. [1 ]
Murray, Benjamin J. [15 ]
Nicosia, Alessia [6 ,23 ]
O'Sullivan, Daniel [15 ,24 ]
Peckhaus, Andreas [2 ,25 ]
Polen, Michael J. [16 ]
Price, Hannah C. [15 ,26 ]
Reicher, Naama [17 ]
Rothenberg, Daniel A. [3 ]
Rudich, Yinon [17 ]
Santachiara, Gianni [6 ]
Schiebel, Thea [2 ]
Schrod, Jann [7 ]
Seifried, Teresa M. [12 ]
Stratmann, Frank [13 ]
Sullivan, Ryan C. [16 ]
Suski, Kaitlyn J. [1 ,27 ]
Szakall, Miklos [11 ]
Taylor, Hans P. [5 ]
Ullrich, Romy [2 ]
Vergara-Temprado, Jesus [10 ,15 ]
Wagner, Robert [2 ]
Whale, Thomas F. [15 ,28 ]
Weber, Daniel [7 ]
机构
[1] Colorado State Univ, Dept Atmospher Sci, Ft Collins, CO 80523 USA
[2] Inst Meteorol & Climate Res IMK AAF, KIT, Eggenstein Leopoldshafen, Germany
[3] MIT, Dept Earth Atmospher & Planetary Sci, Cambridge, MA USA
[4] MIT, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, 77 Massachusetts Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
[5] North Carolina State Univ, Dept Marine Earth & Atmospher Sci, Box 8208, Raleigh, NC 27695 USA
[6] CNR, ISAC, Inst Atmospher Sci & Climate, Bologna, Italy
[7] Goethe Univ Frankfurt, Inst Atmospher & Environm Sci, D-60438 Frankfurt, Germany
[8] Texas A&M Univ, Dept Atmospher Sci, College Stn, TX USA
[9] Univ Bielefeld, Fac Chem, Bielefeld, Germany
[10] Swiss Fed Inst Technol, Inst Atmospher & Climate Sci, Zurich, Switzerland
[11] Johannes Gutenberg Univ Mainz, Inst Atmospher Phys, Mainz, Germany
[12] TU Wien, Inst Mat Chem, Vienna, Austria
[13] Leibniz Inst Tropospher Res, D-04318 Leipzig, Germany
[14] Pacific Northwest Natl Lab, Atmospher Sci & Global Change Div, Richland, WA USA
[15] Univ Leeds, Sch Earth & Environm, Inst Climate & Atmospher Sci, Leeds LS2 9JT, W Yorkshire, England
[16] Carnegie Mellon Univ, Ctr Atmospher Particle Studies, Pittsburgh, PA 15213 USA
[17] Weizmann Inst Sci, Dept Earth & Planetary Sci, IL-76100 Rehovot, Israel
[18] West Texas A&M Univ, Dept Life Earth & Environm Sci, Canyon, TX USA
[19] Univ N Carolina, Dept Environm Sci & Engn, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 USA
[20] Satellite Based Climate Monitoring, German Weather Serv, D-63067 Offenbach, Germany
[21] ACME AtronOmat LLC, Portland, OR USA
[22] Lund Univ, Div Nucl Phys, S-22100 Lund, Sweden
[23] CNRS, Lab Meteorol Phys, LaMP, Aubiere, France
[24] NHS Digital, 1 Trevelyan Sq,Boar Lane, Leeds LS1 6AE, W Yorkshire, England
[25] Inst Tech Phys, German Aerosp Ctr DLR, D-70569 Stuttgart, Germany
[26] Facil Airborne Atmospher Measurements, Cranfield MK43 0AL, Beds, England
[27] Pacific Northwest Natl Lab, Richland, WA USA
[28] Univ Leeds, Sch Chem, Leeds LS2 9JT, W Yorkshire, England
[29] Finnish Meteorol Inst, FIN-00101 Helsinki, Finland
[30] Owlstone Med Ltd, 162 Cambridge Sci Pk,Milton Rd, Cambridge CB4 0GH, England
基金
美国国家科学基金会; 英国自然环境研究理事会; 奥地利科学基金会; 欧洲研究理事会;
关键词
IMMERSION FREEZING BEHAVIOR; PARTICLE SURFACE-AREA; MINERAL DUST; DIFFUSION CHAMBER; NUCLEI; PRECIPITATION; FELDSPAR; DEPOLARIZATION; TEMPERATURE; INSTRUMENT;
D O I
10.5194/amt-11-6231-2018
中图分类号
P4 [大气科学(气象学)];
学科分类号
0706 ; 070601 ;
摘要
The second phase of the Fifth International Ice Nucleation Workshop (FIN-02) involved the gathering of a large number of researchers at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology's Aerosol Interactions and Dynamics of the Atmosphere (AIDA) facility to promote characterization and understanding of ice nucleation measurements made by a variety of methods used worldwide. Compared to the previous workshop in 2007, participation was doubled, reflecting a vibrant research area. Experimental methods involved sampling of aerosol particles by direct processing ice nucleation measuring systems from the same volume of air in separate experiments using different ice nucleating particle (INP) types, and collections of aerosol particle samples onto filters or into liquid for sharing amongst measurement techniques that post-process these samples. In this manner, any errors introduced by differences in generation methods when samples are shared across laboratories were mitigated. Furthermore, as much as possible, aerosol particle size distribution was controlled so that the size limitations of different methods were minimized. The results presented here use data from the workshop to assess the comparability of immersion freezing measurement methods activating INPs in bulk suspensions, methods that activate INPs in condensation and/or immersion freezing modes as single particles on a substrate, continuous flow diffusion chambers (CFDCs) directly sampling and processing particles well above water saturation to maximize immersion and subsequent freezing of aerosol particles, and expansion cloud chamber simulations in which liquid cloud droplets were first activated on aerosol particles prior to freezing. The AIDA expansion chamber measurements are expected to be the closest representation to INP activation in atmospheric cloud parcels in these comparisons, due to exposing particles freely to adiabatic cooling. The different particle types used as INPs included the minerals illite NX and potassium feldspar (K-feldspar), two natural soil dusts representative of arable sandy loam (Argentina) and highly erodible sandy dryland (Tunisia) soils, respectively, and a bacterial INP (Snomax (R)). Considered together, the agreement among post-processed immersion freezing measurements of the numbers and fractions of particles active at different temperatures following bulk collection of particles into liquid was excellent, with possible temperature uncertainties inferred to be a key factor in determining INP uncertainties. Collection onto filters for rinsing versus directly into liquid in impingers made little difference. For methods that activated collected single particles on a substrate at a controlled humidity at or above water saturation, agreement with immersion freezing methods was good in most cases, but was biased low in a few others for reasons that have not been resolved, but could relate to water vapor competition effects. Amongst CFDC-style instruments, various factors requiring (variable) higher supersaturations to achieve equivalent immersion freezing activation dominate the uncertainty between these measurements, and for comparison with bulk immersion freezing methods. When operated above water saturation to include assessment of immersion freezing, CFDC measurements often measured at or above the upper bound of immersion freezing device measurements, but often underestimated INP concentration in comparison to an immersion freezing method that first activates all particles into liquid droplets prior to cooling (the PIMCA-PINC device, or Portable Immersion Mode Cooling chAmber-Portable Ice Nucleation Chamber), and typically slightly underestimated INP number concentrations in comparison to cloud parcel expansions in the AIDA chamber; this can be largely mitigated when it is possible to raise the relative humidity to sufficiently high values in the CFDCs, although this is not always possible operationally. Correspondence of measurements of INPs among direct sampling and post-processing systems varied depending on the INP type. Agreement was best for Snomax (R) particles in the temperature regime colder than 10 degrees C, where their ice nucleation activity is nearly maximized and changes very little with temperature. At temperatures warmer than -10 degrees C, Snomax (R) INP measurements (all via freezing of suspensions) demonstrated discrepancies consistent with previous reports of the instability of its protein aggregates that appear to make it less suitable as a calibration INP at these temperatures. For Argentinian soil dust particles, there was excellent agreement across all measurement methods; measures ranged within 1 order of magnitude for INP number concentrations, active fractions and calculated active site densities over a 25 to 30 degrees C range and 5 to 8 orders of corresponding magnitude change in number concentrations. This was also the case for all temperatures warmer than -25 degrees C in Tunisian dust experiments. In contrast, discrepancies in measurements of INP concentrations or active site densities that exceeded 2 orders of magnitude across a broad range of temperature measurements found at temperatures warmer than- 25 degrees C in a previous study were replicated for illite NX. Discrepancies also exceeded 2 orders of magnitude at temperatures of -20 to -25 degrees C for potassium feldspar (K-feldspar), but these coincided with the range of temperatures at which INP concentrations increase rapidly at approximately an order of magnitude per 2 degrees C cooling for K-feldspar. These few discrepancies did not outweigh the overall positive outcomes of the workshop activity, nor the future utility of this data set or future similar efforts for resolving remaining measurement issues. Measurements of the same materials were repeatable over the time of the workshop and demonstrated strong consistency with prior studies, as reflected by agreement of data broadly with parameterizations of different specific or general (e.g., soil dust) aerosol types. The divergent measurements of the INP activity of illite NX by direct versus post-processing methods were not repeated for other particle types, and the Snomax (R) data demonstrated that, at least for a biological INP type, there is no expected measurement bias between bulk collection and direct immediately processed freezing methods to as warm as -10 degrees C. Since particle size ranges were limited for this workshop, it can be expected that for atmospheric populations of INPs, measurement discrepancies will appear due to the different capabilities of methods for sampling the full aerosol size distribution, or due to limitations on achieving sufficient water supersaturations to fully capture immersion freezing in direct processing instruments. Overall, this workshop presents an improved picture of present capabilities for measuring INPs than in past workshops, and provides direction toward addressing remaining measurement issues.
引用
收藏
页码:6231 / 6257
页数:27
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