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In-cloud scavenging scheme for aerosol modules.

Authors :
Holopainen, Eemeli
Kokkola, Harri
Laakso, Anton
Kühn, Thomas
Source :
Geoscientific Model Development Discussions. 7/17/2020, p1-30. 30p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

In this study we introduce an in-cloud wet deposition scheme for liquid and ice phase clouds for global aerosol-climate models which use a size-segregated aerosol description. For in-cloud nucleation scavenging, the scheme uses cloud droplet activation and ice nucleation rates obtained from the host model. For in-cloud impaction scavenging, we used a method where the removal rate depends on the aerosol size and cloud droplet radii. The scheme was compared to a scheme that uses fixed scavenging coefficients. The comparison included vertical profiles and mass and number distributions of wet deposition fluxes of different aerosol compounds and for different latitude bands. Using the scheme presented here, mass concentrations for black carbon, organic carbon, sulfate, and the number concentration of particles with diameters larger than 100nm are higher than using fixed scavenging coefficients, with the largest differences in the vertical profiles in the Arctic. On the other hand, the number concentrations of small particles show a decrease, especially in the Arctic region. These results indicate that, compared to using fixed scavenging coefficients, nucleation scavenging is less efficient and impaction scavenging is increased in the scheme introduced here. Without further adjustments in the host model, our wet deposition scheme produced unrealistically high aerosol concentrations, especially at high altitudes. This also leads to a spuriously long lifetime of black carbon aerosol. To find a better setup for simulating aerosol vertical profiles and transport, sensitivity simulations were conducted where aerosol emission distribution and hygroscopicity were altered. The simulated vertical profiles of aerosol in these sensitivity studies were evaluated against aircraft observations. The lifetimes of different aerosol compounds were also evaluated against the ensemble mean of models involved in the Aerosol Comparisons between Observations and Models (AEROCOM) project. The best comparison between the observations and the model was achieved with the new wet deposition scheme when black carbon was emitted internally mixed with soluble compounds instead of keeping it externally mixed. This also produced atmospheric lifetimes for the other species which were comparable to the AEROCOM model means. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19919611
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Geoscientific Model Development Discussions
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
144662151
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-2020-220