The importance of interstitial particle scavenging by cloud droplets in shaping the remote aerosol size distribution and global aerosol-climate effects

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Abstract

In this paper, we investigate the coagulation of interstitial aerosol particles (particles too small to activate to cloud droplets) with cloud drops, a process often ignored in aerosol-climate models. We use the GEOS-Chem-TOMAS (Goddard Earth Observing System-Chemistry TwO-Moment Aerosol Sectional) global chemical transport model with aerosol microphysics to calculate the changes in the aerosol size distribution, cloud-albedo aerosol indirect effect, and direct aerosol effect due to the interstitial coagulation process. We find that inclusion of interstitial coagulation in clouds lowers total particle number concentrations by 15-21% globally, where the range is due to varying assumptions regarding activation diameter, cloud droplet size, and ice cloud physics. The interstitial coagulation process lowers the concentration of particles with dry diameters larger than 80 nm (a proxy for larger CCN) by 10-12%. These 80 nm particles are not directly removed by the interstitial coagulation but are reduced in concentration because fewer smaller particles grow to diameters larger than 80 nm. The global aerosol indirect effect of adding interstitial coagulation varies from +0.4 to +1.3 W m -2 where again the range depends on our cloud assumptions. Thus, the aerosol indirect effect of this process is significant, but the magnitude depends greatly on assumptions regarding activation diameter, cloud droplet size, and ice cloud physics. The aerosol direct effect of the interstitial coagulation process is minor (< 0.01 W m -2) due to the shift in the aerosol size distribution at sizes where scattering is most effective being small. We recommend that this interstitial scavenging process be considered in aerosol models when the size distribution and aerosol indirect effects are important.

Figures

  • Table 1. Summary of simulations.
  • Table 2. Summary of the global mean change in aerosol number (N10 and N80) and the radiative effect for all sensitivity simulations versus the base case.
  • Figure 1. Annual-mean percent changes in N10 (a and c) and N80 (b and d) changes between INT_80nm_10µm_238K and BASE. (a) and (b) show the changes for the 2 km model layer (representative of low clouds), and (c) and (d) show the zonal-mean changes throughout the troposphere.
  • Figure 2. Annual-mean AIE between the INT_65nm_10µm_238K and BASE simulations.
  • Figure 3. Observed and simulated (BASE and INT_65nm_10µm_238K) annual-mean aerosol number size distributions described in D’Andrea et al. (2013).
  • Figure 4. Annual-mean N10, N40, N80 and N150 GEOS-Chem-TOMAS simulation-to-measurement comparisons for the five simulations at the 21 SMPS measurement sites.
  • Table 3. Statistical summary of the comparisons of simulated to measured N10, N40, N80 and N150 across the 21 sites. Included statistics are log-mean bias (LMB), slope (m), and coefficient of determination (R2). Bold font indicates the simulation performing best for each statistic.

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CITATION STYLE

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Pierce, J. R., Croft, B., Kodros, J. K., D’Andrea, S. D., & Martin, R. V. (2015). The importance of interstitial particle scavenging by cloud droplets in shaping the remote aerosol size distribution and global aerosol-climate effects. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 15(11), 6147–6158. https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-15-6147-2015

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