9 research outputs found

    Trapping of trace gases by growing ice surfaces including surface-saturated adsorption

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    Key steps leading to the uptake of trace gases into atmospheric cloud ice particles include gas phase diffusion of trace gas molecules toward growing ice crystals and the kinetics of molecular interactions at the ice surfaces. In the case of nitric acid, laboratory studies and airborne field observations indicate uptake in growing ice films and cirrus ice particles above the thermodynamic solubility limit. This implies that uptake of nitric acid molecules on growing ice surfaces (trapping) controls the nitric acid content in ice particles residing in supersaturated air. A previous trapping model is updated to include effects of surface-saturated adsorption. Exact analytical solutions to the problem are derived to enable the calculation of the amount of vapor trapped for a given ice growth rate, assuming Langmuir-type adsorption isotherms. Those solutions are provided in terms of trapping efficiencies and equivalent uptake coefficients, net vapor fluxes toward ice crystals or ice films, steady state molar ratios of trapped molecules in the ice phase, and gas-ice partitioning factors. The trapping model includes the underlying adsorption equilibrium model asymptotically for nongrowing ice particles. Comparisons to laboratory and field measurements of nitric acid uptake are carried out. Observed dependences of uptake as a function of nitric acid partial pressure, ice growth rate, and temperature are reproduced fairly well. Nitric acid molar ratios in cirrus ice are neither controlled purely by adsorption nor purely by gas phase diffusion, underscoring the importance of using the trapping concept to interpret these observations. These results also suggest further mechanisms that enhance the nitric acid content in cirrus ice at the tropical tropopause at very low temperatures. A discussion of potential model improvements outlines the physical conditions in which the updated model describes trapping well and leads to further insight into the physical nature of the trapping process

    Photochemical processing of aqueous atmospheric brown carbon

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    10.5194/acp-15-6087-2015Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics15116087-610

    Substantial secondary organic aerosol formation in a coniferous forest: Observations of both day- and nighttime chemistry

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    10.5194/acp-16-6721-2016Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics16116721-673
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