We investigate mass transfer during absorption of highly soluble gases such
as HNO_{3}, H_{2}O_{2} by stagnant cloud droplets in the presence of inert
admixtures. Thermophysical properties of the gases and liquids are assumed to
be constant. Diffusion interactions between droplets, caused by the overlap of
depleted of soluble gas regions around the neighboring droplets, are taken into
account in the approximation of a cellular model of a gas-droplet suspension
whereby a suspension is viewed as a periodic structure consisting of the
identical spherical cells with periodic boundary conditions at the cell
boundary. Using this model we determined temporal and spatial dependencies of
the concentration of the soluble trace gas in a gaseous phase and in a droplet
and calculated the dependence of the scavenging coefficient on time. It is
shown that scavenging of highly soluble gases by cloud droplets leads to
essential decrease of soluble trace gas concentration in the interstitial air.
We found that scavenging coefficient for gas absorption by cloud droplets
remains constant and sharply decreases only at the final stage of absorption.
In the calculations we employed gamma size distribution of cloud droplets. It
was shown that despite of the comparable values of Henry's law constants for
the hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and the nitric acid (HNO3), the nitric acid is
scavenged more effectively by cloud than the hydrogen peroxide due to a major
affect of the dissociation reaction on HNO3 scavenging.Comment: 28 pages, including 11 Figures, 1 Tabl