The potential influence of Asian and African mineral dust on ice, mixed-phase and liquid water clouds

57Citations
Citations of this article
67Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

This modelling study explores the availability of mineral dust particles as ice nuclei for interactions with ice, mixed-phase and liquid water clouds, also tracking the particles' history of cloud-processing. We performed 61 320 one-week forward trajectory calculations originating near the surface of major dust emitting regions in Africa and Asia using high-resolution meteorological analysis fields for the year 2007. Dust-bearing trajectories were assumed to be those coinciding with known dust emission seasons, without explicitly modelling dust emission and deposition processes. We found that dust emissions from Asian deserts lead to a higher potential for interactions with high ice clouds, despite being the climatologically much smaller dust emission source. This is due to Asian regions experiencing significantly more ascent than African regions, with strongest ascent in the Asian Taklimakan desert at ∼25%, ∼40% and 10% of trajectories ascending to 300 hPa in spring, summer and fall, respectively. The specific humidity at each trajectory's starting point was transported in a Lagrangian manner and relative humidities with respect to water and ice were calculated in 6-h steps downstream, allowing us to estimate the formation of liquid, mixed-phase and ice clouds. Downstream of the investigated dust sources, practically none of the simulated air parcels reached conditions of homogeneous ice nucleation (T≲-40 °C) along trajectories that have not experienced water saturation first. By far the largest fraction of cloud forming trajectories entered conditions of mixed-phase clouds, where mineral dust will potentially exert the biggest influence. The majority of trajectories also passed through atmospheric regions supersaturated with respect to ice but subsaturated with respect to water, where so-called "warm ice clouds" (T≲-40 °C) theoretically may form prior to supercooled water or mixed-phase clouds. The importance of "warm ice clouds" and the general influence of dust in the mixed-phase cloud region are highly uncertain due to both a considerable scatter in recent laboratory data from ice nucleation experiments, which we briefly review in this work, and due to uncertainties in sub-grid scale vertical transport processes unresolved by the present trajectory analysis. For "classical" cirrus-forming temperatures (T≲-40 °C), our results show that only mineral dust ice nuclei that underwent mixed-phase cloud-processing, most likely acquiring coatings of organic or inorganic material, are likely to be relevant. While the potential paucity of deposition ice nuclei shown in this work dimishes the possibility of deposition nucleation, the absence of liquid water droplets at T≲-40 °C makes the less explored contact freezing mechanism (involving droplet collisions with bare ice nuclei) highly inefficient. These factors together indicate the necessity of further systematic studies of immersion mode ice nucleation on mineral dust suspended in atmospherically relevant coatings. © 2010 Author(s).

References Powered by Scopus

Environmental characterization of global sources of atmospheric soil dust identified with the Nimbus 7 Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer (TOMS) absorbing aerosol product

2364Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Stratosphere‐troposphere exchange

2086Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Aerosol-cloud-precipitation interactions. Part 1. The nature and sources of cloud-active aerosols

1254Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Cited by Powered by Scopus

Dust and biological aerosols from the Sahara and Asia influence precipitation in the Western U.S

487Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Clarifying the dominant sources and mechanisms of cirrus cloud formation

422Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

A particle-surface-area-based parameterization of immersion freezing on desert dust particles

294Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Wiacek, A., Peter, T., & Lohmann, U. (2010). The potential influence of Asian and African mineral dust on ice, mixed-phase and liquid water clouds. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 10(18), 8649–8667. https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-10-8649-2010

Readers' Seniority

Tooltip

PhD / Post grad / Masters / Doc 22

46%

Researcher 17

35%

Professor / Associate Prof. 7

15%

Lecturer / Post doc 2

4%

Readers' Discipline

Tooltip

Earth and Planetary Sciences 17

35%

Chemistry 15

31%

Environmental Science 14

29%

Physics and Astronomy 3

6%

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free