Smoke aerosols prevail throughout Amazonia because of widespread biomass
burning during the dry season, and external mixing, low variability in the
particle size distribution and low particle hygroscopicity are typical. There
can be profound effects on cloud properties. This study uses an adiabatic
cloud model to simulate the activation of smoke particles as cloud
condensation nuclei (CCN) for three hypothetical case studies, chosen as to
resemble biomass burning aerosol observations in Amazonia. The relative
importance of variability in hygroscopicity, mixing state, and activation
kinetics for the activated fraction and maximum supersaturation is
assessed. For a population with κp = 0.04, an overestimation
of the cloud droplet number concentration Nd for the three selected case studies between 22.4 ± 1.4 and 54.3 ± 3.7 % was obtained
when assuming a hygroscopicity parameter κp = 0.20. Assuming
internal mixing of the aerosol population led to overestimations of up to
20 % of Nd when a group of particles with medium hygroscopicity
was present in the externally mixed population cases. However, the
overestimations were below 10 % for external mixtures between very low
and low-hygroscopicity particles, as seems to be the case for Amazon smoke
particles. Kinetic limitations were significant for medium- and
high-hygroscopicity particles, and much lower for very low and
low-hygroscopicity particles. When particles were assumed to be at
equilibrium and to respond instantly to changes in the air parcel
supersaturation, the overestimation of the droplet concentration was up to
∼ 100 % in internally mixed populations, and up to
∼ 250 % in externally mixed ones, being larger for the higher
values of hygroscopicity. In addition, a perceptible delay between the times
when maximum supersaturation and maximum aerosol activated fraction are
reached was noticed and, for aerosol populations with effective
hygroscopicity κpeff higher than a certain threshold
value, the delay in particle activation was such that no particles were
activated at the time of maximum supersaturation. Considering internally
mixed populations, for an updraft velocity W = 0.5 m s−1 this
threshold of no activation varied between κpeff = 0.35 and κpeff = 0.5 for the different case
studies. However, for low hygroscopicity, kinetic limitations played a weaker
role for CCN activation of particles, even when taking into account the large
aerosol mass and number concentrations. For the very low range of
hygroscopicities, the overestimation of the droplet concentration due to the
equilibrium assumption was lowest and the delay between the times when
maximum supersaturation and maximum activated fraction were reached was
greatly reduced or no longer observed (depending on the case study). These
findings on uncertainties and sensitivities provide guidance on appropriate
simplifications that can be used for modeling of smoke aerosols within
general circulation models. The use of medium values of hygroscopicity
representative of smoke aerosols for other biomass burning regions on Earth
can lead to significant errors compared to the use of low hygroscopicity for
Amazonia (between 0.05 and 0.13, according to available observations). Also
in this region, consideration of the biomass burning population as internally
mixed will lead to small errors in the droplet concentration, while
significantly increasing the computational burden. Regardless of the large
smoke aerosol loads in the region during the dry season, kinetic limitations
are expected to be low
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