22 research outputs found

    Spatiotemporal changes and driving factors of reference evapotranspiration and crop evapotranspiration for cotton production in China from 1960 to 2019

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    Introduction: Understanding and tracking changes in crop water requirements is crucial for effective irrigation, water planning, and future decisions. Determining the reference evapotranspiration (ETO) and crop evapotranspiration (ETC) of China cotton is essential for water resource management.Methods: This study analyzed the spatiotemporal changes in ETO and ETC at 248 standard stations in cotton production regions of China from 1960 to 2019, and the ETO and ETC of each station were quantified by using the CropWat 8.0 and non-parametric Mann-Kendall test. The impacts of climate change on ETO and ETC were evaluated by analyzing the contribution rate and sensitivity coefficient of climate change.Discussion: The results revealed distinct distributions of ETO and ETC across various growth stages and spatial scales in the cotton production regions of China. In the Huanghe Valley, the rate of decline for ETO decreased from 787.23 mm to 769.84 mm, while in the Yangtze Valley cotton region, it decreased from 749.19 mm to 735.01 mm. Similarly, in the Northwest inland cotton regions, the rate of decline for ETO reduced from 991.19 mm to 982.70 mm. As for ETC, the rate of decline decreased from 677.62 mm to 654.33 mm in the Huanghe Valley, from 653.02 mm to 625.50 mm in the Yangtze Valley, and from 916.25 mm to 886.74 mm in the Northwest inland cotton regions. ETO was highly sensitive to maximum air temperature (Tmax), followed by relative humidity (RH), sunshine duration (SD), wind speed at 2 m height (WS), and minimum air temperature (Tmin). WS was the most influential climate variable associated with ETO change, followed by Tmax, SD, RH, and Tmin. Significant declines in WS and SD were indicated in the decrease in ETO in the Huanghe Valley and Yangtze Valley cotton regions. WS showed a significant decrease in ETO in the northwestern inland cotton region. However, decreased RH and increased temperature commonly reversed the trend of ETO from 2000 to 2019, and the northwestern inland cotton region had the most significant upward trend. Amidst high temperatures and drought stress, the irrigation needs of cotton were rising, posing a significant threat to both cotton production and water resources

    Impacts of Simulated Contrail Processing and Organic Content Change on the Ice Nucleation of Soot Particles

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    Soot particles may undergo cloud-processing during atmospheric transport after which the particle porosity and surface wettability can be modified. Soot particles therefore show varying ice nucleation (IN) abilities via the pore condensation and freezing (PCF) mechanism, leading to poorly constrained effects on cirrus formation and climate. This study simulates a typical cloud-processing condition (at 228 K) for size-selected (200 and 400 nm) aviation soot proxies with different organic contents. Based on the particle size, mass and morphology changes, as well as the findings from parallel studies on similar soot samples, we demonstrate that cloud-processing increases the particle compactness and water-interaction ability. However, the pore availability change resulting from above property changes dominates the IN ability of cloud-processed particles via PCF. Even originally organic-rich and hydrophobic soot particles can nucleate ice via PCF if suitable pores can be generated after organic removal and cloud-processing.ISSN:0094-8276ISSN:1944-800

    Influence of Lowering Soot‐Water Contact Angle on Ice Nucleation of Ozone‐Aged Soot

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    Abstract Organic‐lean and organic‐rich size‐selected soot particles were exposed to a varying O3 concentration, progressively decreasing the soot‐water contact angle (θ) to study its impact on ice nucleation (IN). The IN ability of fresh and O3‐aged soot between 218 and 233 K was observed while monitoring the particle mass and size distributions. The properties of fresh and O3‐aged bulk organic‐lean soot samples with a low and high O3‐adsorption were characterized for soot‐water θ, chemical composition, functional groups, soot‐water interaction ability and porosity. By retaining the soot porosity between aged and unaged samples, we demonstrate that a decrease in θ after O3‐aging enhances organic‐lean soot IN via pore condensation and freezing. Fresh organic‐rich soot exhibits suppressed homogeneous freezing, but after O3‐aging it freezes within uncertainty of the homogeneous freezing threshold of solution drops, because of increased hydrophilicity

    Enhanced soot particle ice nucleation ability induced by aggregate compaction and densification

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    Soot particles, acting as ice nucleating particles (INPs), can contribute to cirrus cloud formation, which has an important influence on climate. Aviation activities emitting soot particles into the upper troposphere can potentially impact ice nucleation (IN) in cirrus clouds. Pore condensation and freezing (PCF) is an important ice formation pathway for soot particles in the cirrus regime, which requires the soot INP to have specific morphological properties, i.e., mesopore structures. In this study, the morphology and pore size distribution of two kinds of soot samples were modified by a physical agitation method without any chemical modification by which more compacted soot sample aggregates could be produced compared to the unmodified sample. The IN activities of both fresh and compacted soot particles with different sizes, 60, 100, 200 and 400 nm, were systematically tested by the Horizontal Ice Nucleation Chamber (HINC) under mixed-phase and cirrus-cloud-relevant temperatures (T). Our results show that soot particles are unable to form ice crystals at T>235 K (homogeneous nucleation temperature, HNT), but IN is observed for compacted and larger-sized soot aggregates (>200 nm) well below the homogeneous freezing relative humidity (RHhom) for T< HNT, demonstrating PCF as the dominating mechanism for soot IN. We also observed that mechanically compacted soot particles can reach a higher particle activation fraction (AF) value for the same T and RH condition compared to the same aggregate size fresh soot particles. The results also reveal a clear size dependence for the IN activity of soot particles with the same degree of compaction, showing that compacted soot particles with large sizes (200 and 400 nm) are more active INPs and can convey the single importance of soot aggregate morphology for the IN ability. In order to understand the role of soot aggregate morphology for its IN activity, both fresh and compacted soot samples were characterized systematically using particle mass and size measurements, comparisons from TEM (transmission electron microscopy) images, soot porosity characteristics from argon (Ar) and nitrogen (N2) physisorption measurements, as well as soot–water interaction results from DVS (dynamic vapor sorption) measurements. Considering the soot particle physical properties along with its IN activities, the enhanced IN abilities of compacted soot particles are attributed to decreasing mesopore width and increasing mesopore occurrence probability due to the compaction process.ISSN:1680-7375ISSN:1680-736

    The dependence of soot particle ice nucleation ability on its volatile content

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    Aviation soot can affect contrail and cirrus cloud formation and impact climate. A product of incomplete combustion, soot particles, are fractal and hydrophobic aggregates comprising carbonaceous spheres with complex physicochemical properties. In the cirrus cloud regime, the surface wettability and pore abundance of soot particles are important determinants for their ice nucleation ability via pore condensation and freezing. In the atmosphere, soot particles can undergo various ageing processes which modify their surface chemistry and porosity, thus acting as ice nucleating particles with varying abilities as a function of ageing. In this study, size-selected soot particles were treated by thermal denuding at 573 K in a pure nitrogen (N2) or synthetic air (N2 + O2) flow and then exposed to varying relative humidity conditions at a fixed temperature in the range from 218 to 243 K, to investigate the role of volatile content in the ice nucleation ability. Both organic-lean and organic-rich propane (C3H8) flame soot particles, as well as two types of commercially available carbon black soot particles with high and low surface wettability, were tested. The size and mass distribution of soot aerosol were monitored during the ice nucleation experiments. Bulk soot samples also prepared in pure N2 or synthetic air environments at 573 K were characterised by thermogravimetric analysis, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and dynamic vapour sorption measurements, to reveal the relation between denuding volatile content, associated soot particle property modifications and the ice nucleation ability. Our study shows that thermal denuding induces a change in soot particle porosity playing a dominant role in regulating its ice nucleation via the pore condensation and freezing mechanism. The enrichment in mesopore (2–50 nm) availability may enhance soot ice nucleation. The presence of O2 in the thermal denuding process may introduce new active sites on soot particles for water interaction and increase soot surface wettability. However, these active sites only facilitate soot ice nucleation when mesopore structures are available. We conclude that a change in volatile content modifies both morphological properties and surface chemistry for soot particles, but porosity change plays the dominant role in regulating soot particle ice nucleation ability.ISSN:2050-7887ISSN:2050-789

    Location estimation in ZigBee Network based on fingerprinting

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    Abstract — Location-aware computing becomes an exciting research as recent advancements in RF circuits and wireless communication stacks. In this paper, we present a fingerprinting based location estimation technology in ZigBee network. The system uses the signal strength from several base stations rather than time or angle for determining the location of mobile station. Instead of modeling the complex attenuation of signal strength, the system models the probabilistic distribution in different geographical areas which we called fingerprinting. It combines the measured data and fingerprinting to determine the mobile station’s location. The experiment results demon-strate the validity of location estimation in ZigBee network based on fingerprinting

    Laboratory studies of ice nucleation onto bare and internally mixed soot-sulfuric acid particles

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    Soot particles are potential candidates for ice-nucleating particles in cirrus cloud formation, which is known to exert a net-warming effect on climate. Bare soot particles, generally hydrophobic and fractal ones, mainly exist near emission sources. Coated or internally mixed soot particles are more abundant in the atmosphere and have a higher probability of impacting cloud formation and climate. However, the ice nucleation ability of coated soot particles is not as well understood as that of freshly produced soot particles. In this laboratory study, two samples, a propane flame soot and a commercial carbon black, were used as atmospheric soot surrogates and coated with varying wt % of sulfuric acid (H2SO4). The ratio of coating material mass to the mass of bare soot particles was controlled and progressively increased from less than 5 wt % to over 100 wt %. Both bare and coated soot particle ice nucleation activities were investigated with a continuous-flow diffusion chamber operated at mixed-phase and cirrus cloud conditions. The mobility diameter and mass distribution of size-selected soot particles with/without H2SO4 coating were measured by a scanning mobility particle sizer and a centrifugal particle mass analyser running in parallel. The mixing state and morphology of soot particles were characterized by scanning electron microscopy and transmission electron microscopy. In addition, the evidence of the presence of H2SO4 on a coated soot particle surface is shown by energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy. Our study demonstrates that H2SO4 coatings suppress the ice nucleation activity of soot particles to varying degrees depending on the coating thickness, but in a non-linear fashion. Thin coatings causing pore filling in the soot aggregate inhibits pore condensation and freezing. Thick coatings promote particle ice activation via droplet homogeneous freezing. Overall, our findings reveal that H2SO4 coatings will suppress soot particle ice nucleation abilities in the cirrus cloud regime, having implications for the fate of soot particles with respect to cloud formation in the upper troposphere.ISSN:1680-7375ISSN:1680-736

    Physicochemical properties of charcoal aerosols derived from biomass pyrolysis affect their ice-nucleating abilities at cirrus and mixed-phase cloud conditions

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    Atmospheric aerosol particles play a key role in air pollution, health, and climate. Particles from biomass burning emissions are an important source of ambient aerosols, have increased over the past few decades, and are projected to further surge in the future as a result of climate and land use changes. Largely as a result of the variety of organic fuel materials and combustion types, particles emitted from biomass burning are often complex mixtures of inorganic and organic materials, with soot, ash, and charcoal having previously been identified as main particle types being emitted. Despite their importance for climate, their ice nucleationactivities remain insufficiently understood, in particular for charcoalparticles, whose ice nucleation activity has not been reported. Here, wepresent experiments of the ice nucleation activities of 400 nm size-selected charcoal particles, derived from the pyrolysis of two different biomass fuels, namely a grass charcoal and a wood charcoal. We find that the pyrolysis-derived charcoal types investigated do not contribute to ice formation via immersion freezing in mixed-phase cloud conditions. However, our results reveal considerable heterogeneous ice nucleation activity of both charcoal types at cirrus temperatures. An inspection of the ice nucleation results together with dynamic vapor sorption measurements indicates that cirrus ice formation proceeds via pore condensation and freezing. We find wood charcoal to be more ice-active than grass charcoal at cirrus temperatures. We attribute this to the enhanced porosity and water uptake capacity of the wood compared to the grass charcoal. In support of the results, we found a positive correlation of the ice nucleation activity of the wood charcoal particles and their chemical composition, specifically the presence of (inorganic) mineral components, based on single-particle mass spectrometry measurements. Even though correlational in nature, our results corroborate recent findings that ice-active minerals could largely govern the aerosol-cloud interactions of particles emitted from biomass burning emissions.ISSN:1680-7375ISSN:1680-736

    Cooling pitch cabinets in wind turbines using a pulsating heat pipe: A case study

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    As the electric capacity of wind turbine increases, heat dissipation in pitch cabinets becomes challenging owing to the limited space and rotating conditions. To cool down the pitch cabinet more effectively and allow heat dissipation, we designed and implemented a pulsating heat pipe (PHP) in this study. We designed PHP parameters and conducted performance tests to compare the cooling performance of the fabricated PHP with that of an air-based cooling system in a 1.5 MW wind turbine. The results demonstrated steady PHP operation under rotating conditions (17.3 rpm). At a heat load of 1000 W, the evaporator outlet temperature was only 76.1 °C. However, increasing the ambient temperature adversely affected PHP operation, resulting in higher temperature and thermal resistance. The heat-pipe-based cooling system lowered the insulated gate bipolar transistor (IGBT) temperature by about 20.4 °C in relation to the air-based cooling system, while being suitable under varied conditions. Additionally, the system could successfully operate when the heat load of IGBT was 2350 W, corresponding to a 7 MW electric capacity of the wind turbine. Reducing the manufacturing cost of the heat pipe would further enhance the applicability of this system for pitch cabinet IGBT cooling, such as decreasing payback period
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