Title of article
Impact of the Bergeron–Findeisen process on the release of aerosol particles during the evolution of cloud ice
Author/Authors
Schwarzenbِck، نويسنده , , A and Mertes، نويسنده , , S and Heintzenberg، نويسنده , , J and Wobrock، نويسنده , , W and Laj، نويسنده , , P، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages
19
From page
295
To page
313
Abstract
The paper focuses on the redistribution of aerosol particles (APs) during the artificial nucleation and subsequent growth of ice crystals in a supercooled cloud. A significant number of the supercooled cloud droplets during icing periods (seeding agents: C3H8, CO2) did not freeze as was presumed prior to the experiment but instead evaporated. The net mass flux of water vapour from the evaporating droplets to the nucleating ice crystals (Bergeron–Findeisen mechanism) led to the release of residual particles that simultaneously appeared in the interstitial phase. The strong decrease of the droplet residuals confirms the nucleation of ice particles on seeding germs without natural aerosol particles serving as ice nuclei. As the number of residual particles during the seedings did not drop to zero, other processes such as heterogeneous ice nucleation, spontaneous freezing, entrainment of supercooled droplets and diffusion to the created particle-free ice germs must have contributed to the experimental findings. During the icing periods, residual mass concentrations in the condensed phase dropped by a factor of 1.1–6.7, as compared to the unperturbed supercooled cloud. As the Bergeron–Findeisen process also occurs without artificial seeding in the atmosphere, this study demonstrated that the hydrometeors in mixed-phase clouds might be much cleaner than anticipated for the simple freezing process of supercooled droplets in tropospheric mid latitude clouds.
Keywords
Mass concentration in condensed phases , Residual particles , Mixed-phase cloud , Bergeron–Findeisen process
Journal title
Atmospheric Research
Serial Year
2001
Journal title
Atmospheric Research
Record number
2245197
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