33 research outputs found

    Reconciliation of measurements of hygroscopic growth and critical supersaturation of aerosol particles in central Germany

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    Aerosol physical, chemical and hygroscopic properties were measured in a range of airmasses during COPS (Convective and Orographically-induced Precipitation Study) ground-based in June and July of 2007 at the Hornisgrinde mountain site in the Black Forest, Southwest Germany. Non-refractory aerosol composition was measured with an Aerosol Mass Spectrometer, simultaneous to hygroscopic growth factors at 86% relative humidity and CCN activity measurements for particles of dry (< 20%) diameters 27 to 217 nm, with particle water uptake exhibiting substantial variability with time and with particle size. Variability in the measurements of hygroscopic growth factor and critical supersaturation for particles of similar sizes indicates significant compositional impact on particle water affinity. Critical supersaturation prediction using a single parameter hygroscopicity approximation derived from measured HTDMA mean growth factors deviate, beyond measurement uncertainties, from critical supersaturations derived from CCN measurements. These led to differences averaging around 35% in the number of CCN (N-CCN) for the most reliable measurements depending on averaging methodology, often very much larger for individual time periods. This indicates aspects of water uptake behaviour unresolved in this experiment by the single parameter representation which, depending on its origin, may have important consequences on its generalised use.Peer reviewe

    Measurements of cloud water deposition on vegetation using a lysimeter and a flux gradient technique.

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    The deposition of cloud droplets onto moorland vegetation has been measured using two independent methods. Vertical gradients in wind velocity and liquid water content (LWC) provided cloud deposition fluxes of typically 10 mg māˆ’2 sāˆ’1 and deposition velocities (vg) in the range 21 to 39 mm sāˆ’1 for droplets with a number mean radius in the range 6 to 7 Ī¼m. In these conditions, the aerodynamic resistance provided the major limitation to deposition rates contributing 60% of the overall transfer resistance. Simultaneous measurements of net water exchange between the atmosphere and the ground using a lysimeter showed that the bulk of the water (typically 80%) was deposited as a vapour flux onto frozen soil within the lysimeter. The vapour deposition continued to dominate the water flux measurements until the frozen soil thawed. The measurements show that cloud water deposition at Great Dun Fell (altitude 847 m asl) may increase annual wet deposited SO42āˆ’, NO3āˆ’, H+ and NH4+ by 12%, but if such high altitude sites were afforested, the increase would be 44%
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