New particle formation via the ion-mediated sulfuric
acid and ammonia
molecular clustering mechanism remains the most widely observed and
experimentally verified pathway. Recent laboratory and molecular level
observations indicate iodine-driven nucleation as a potentially important
source of new particles, especially in coastal areas. In this study,
we assess the role of iodine species in particle formation using the
best available molecular thermochemistry data and coupled to a detailed
1-d column model which is run along air mass trajectories over the
Southern Ocean and the coast of Antarctica. In the air masses traversing
the open ocean, ion-mediated SA-NH3 clustering appears
insufficient to explain the observed particle size distribution, wherein
the simulated Aitken mode is lacking. Including the iodine-assisted
particle formation improves the modeled Aitken mode representation
with an increase in the number of freshly formed particles. This implies
that more particles survive and grow to Aitken mode sizes via condensation
of gaseous precursors and heterogeneous reactions. Under certain meteorological
conditions, iodine-assisted particle formation can increase cloud
condensation nuclei concentrations by 20%–100%