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The role of natural and man-made ice-forming nuclei in the atmosphere
Authors:Jan Rosinski
Affiliation:

National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, Colorado 80303, U.S.A.

Abstract:
Water-soluble and insoluble, organic and inorganic, natural and man-made aerosol particles participate in vapor-liquid, vapor-solid (ice), and liquid-solid phase transitions in the atmosphere. Hydrosol particles (aerosol particles that have been transferred into water droplets) nucleate ice through freezing. A small without scavenging or being scavenged by another aerosol particle. It is also difficult to imagine that pure mineral particles can be lifted from soil surfaces. In view of this, an ice-nucleating site may be a much smaller particle attached to a larger clay particle. To this category belong, e.g., silver iodide-clay mixed particles. Limited studies indicate that decaying leaves and forest litter under the surface of soils are a potential source of biogenic ice-forming nuclei but that their contribution to the atmosphere is very limited. Research should be directed to study possible relations between cloud condensation nuclei and ice-forming nuclei derived from natural organic compounds (terpenes, leaf-derived nuclei, bacteria, etc.).

A balance must be maintained between large cloud chambers, in which duplication of in-cloud processes is possible, and the special instrumentation which provides information about the modes of ice nucleation on aerosol particles. The two modes of instrumentation should supplement each other.

The greatest difficulty in attempting to make a comparison between the number of ice-forming nuclei estimated in the laboratory and the number in a cloud is the lack of knowledge of the time-temperature-humidity history of the aerosol particles. In nature, the ability of an aerosol particle to nucleate ice may be destroyed or“poisoned“ in the presence of pollutants. An aerosol particle may, on the other hand, become an activated or warmer ice-forming nucleus, e.g.,after the sublimation of ice once formed on it. The temperature of ice nucleation is not a singular property of a particle; the warmest temperatures of ice nucleation of, e.g., particles of a certain soil 10cm in diameter are-15°C,-10°C, and-8°C for nucleation through freezing, condensation followed by freezing and contact, respectively (ref.26). The progress made in instrumentation permits studies of the modes of ice nucleation. Understanding the physical and chemical processes taking place in clouds makes estimates of the rates of ice particle formation more realistic (Young [ref.157]).

The reader should examine two previous reviews written by Mossop (1963) and Montefinale . (1971) for a more complete list of references.

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