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5. Formation and Growth of Ice Crystals

5. Formation and Growth of Ice Crystals. 5.1 Effects of freezing in a cloud. 5.2 Formation (nucleation) of ice crystals. 5.3 Atmospheric ice nuclei. 5.4 Ice crystal growth by diffusion. 5.5 Ice crystal growth by aggregation & accretion. 5.6 Shape of ice crystals.

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5. Formation and Growth of Ice Crystals

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  1. 5. Formation and Growth of Ice Crystals 5.1 Effects of freezing in a cloud 5.2 Formation (nucleation) of ice crystals 5.3 Atmospheric ice nuclei 5.4 Ice crystal growth by diffusion 5.5 Ice crystal growth by aggregation & accretion 5.6 Shape of ice crystals 5.7 Models of liquid and ice clouds

  2. 5.1 Effects of freezing in a cloud What is a typical temperature change associated with freezing? How important is the release of latent heat when cloud liquid is changed to cloud ice?

  3. - Consider freezing to occur at constant pressure and initial temperature is between 0 and -40 degrees - Assume the process is adiabatic - As the water freezes, latent heat is released - Air initially saturated with respect to water will be supersaturated with respect to the frozen droplets - Deposition will occur, releasing an additional amount of latent heat - Entire system is warmed, saturation vapor pressure with respect to ice will increase - Sublimation will occur and the system is in the equilibrium state

  4. Three steps: 1. Water freezes at constant temperature T; 2. Vapor condenses on the ice at constant T, until the water vapor pressure reaches the saturation value over ice at T’; 3. The entire system is heated from T to T’.

  5. 5.2 Formation (nucleation) of ice crystals Why? • Cloud tops reach to heights where the temperature is colder than 0º c. • Ice crystals may form. • Freezing and deposition • Homogeneous and heterogeneous nucleation. • Nucleation: to begin to form.

  6. How? • Growth is similar to that of a droplet. • Diffusion • Coagulation (collision and coalescence) • What is the difference? • Equilibrium vapor pressure • Vapor saturated with respect to liquid water is super-saturated with respect to ice. • Diffusional growth is more significant.

  7. Observations • Droplets with r < 5 m will freeze spontaneously at a temperature of about -40º c. • Do drops exist near this temperature in the atmosphere? • Observations from aircraft icing in clouds at temperatures near -40º c indicate some drops don’t freeze until reaching this threshold. • Not uncommon to find liquid water in clouds as cold as -20º c. • super-cooled

  8. Liquid Water Bulk Water Cloud Water • Water mass continuous, large drops, and close together. • Single nucleation event causes the entire mass to freeze. • Water mass distributed over a large number of very small drops • Each drop must undergo its own nucleation event.

  9. Homogeneous • More than a factor of 20 in super-saturation required to induce homogeneous nucleation at 0º c. • Even higher S-1 required for colder temps. • Does not occur in the atmosphere due to the high super-saturation required. • Observation: Ice crystals usually appear in appreciable numbers when the temperature drops below about -15º C.

  10. Heterogeneous • Formation of ice crystal in presence of foreign particles. • Foreign particles are important in the formation of ice crystals, just as in the formation of water droplets. • Water in contact with most materials freezes before temperatures reach -40ºC. • Nucleation is aided by the presence of foreign surfaces or suspended particles.

  11. Factors • Size • The larger the aggregate, the more likely it will be stable and continue to exist. • Material of substrate • The more tightly bound the water molecules to the substrate, the greater the probability of ice nucleation. • Crystal structure of substrate • The closer it resembles that of an ice crystal plane, the larger the chances of nucleation. • When the binding and crystal lattice are favorable, the super-saturation and super-cooling required are much lower than for homogeneous nucleation.

  12. Activation of Nuclei

  13. 5.3 Atmospheric ice nuclei Ice Nuclei Which one would be most likely to activate as an ice nuclei? - Lattice most closely resembles ice. - Relatively warm nucleation temperature. -Silver Iodide

  14. Ice Nuclei • Atmosphere has relative scarcity of freezing nuclei. • Fletcher (1962) • 1 nucleus per liter of air at -20º C. • Increases by a factor of 10 for each 4º C. • Aerosol concentration: 107 nuclei per liter. • Observation: There are more ice crystals than ice nuclei, • How can this be? • Secondary processes • Fracture of ice crystals - Shattering or splintering of freezing drops

  15. Studies • Vonnegut (1947): Material should have crystal properties similar to ice. • AgI (Silver iodide) • PbI2 (Lead iodide) • Experiment: Introduce AgI and PbI2 into super-cooled clouds. • PbI2 worked well, AgI not so well. • Soluble salt fouled up AgI, cleaner sample better. • Making AgI smoke did better yet! • Fukuta (1958): Found 78 inorganic materials effective at temperatures > -20º C.

  16. AgI • AgI widely used in cloud seeding • Studied extensively • Reynolds (1951): AgI less effective after surface changes caused by photo-decomposition in sunlight. • Corrin, et al. (1967): Pure AgI less efficient than AgI containing hygroscopic impurities. • Edwards and Evans (1960, 1968): • AgI works better as freezing nuclei than deposition nuclei.

  17. Observations • Organic nuclei can be ice nuclei. • Large number found that work at temps near 0º C. • Kaolinite - most common atmospheric ice nuclei • mineral • found in many soil types • Remark: Ice crystals that have been evaporated (sublimated) can grow into another crystal at higher temperatures than original. • Trained nuclei • Present with evaporation of cirrus clouds.

  18. 5.4 Ice crystal growth by diffusion • A water saturated cloud has high super-saturation relative to ice. • Favorable for rapid growth by diffusion and deposition. • Liquid drops available to evaporate? • Conditions will remain favorable. • Equilibrium maintained with respect to water. • If drops completely evaporate or freeze, the equilibrium vapor pressure will decrease to the relative to ice value.

  19. Growth Equation • Ice crystal growth rate depends on temperature and pressure. • Inversely with pressure. • Maximum growth occurs at -15ºc over a wide range of pressure. • Kinetic and ventilation effects are neglected.

  20. 5.5 Ice crystal growth by aggregation & accretion • Large particle overtakes small particle. • Accretion: Capture of super-cooled droplets by an ice-phase precipitation particle. • Freeze on immediate contact  Rimed crystals or graupel • Freezing not immediate denser structures, hail. • Aggregation: Clumping of ice crystals to form snowflakes.

  21. Terminal Velocity

  22. Wu et al. (1999, J. Atmos. Sci.)

  23. Snowflake Formation • Crystals form and grow by diffusion. • Some of these crystals become larger than their neighbors • Enhanced diffusional growth • Chance collisions • Crystals or small aggregates continue to grow by sweep out process.

  24. Precipitation • For particles of appreciable size to develop: • ice phase: aggregation or accretion • Water phase: coalescence. • Warm Clouds • Condensation by diffusion alone cannot explain formation of particles the size of a medium raindrop (1 mg or r0.62mm). • Coalescence must occur. • Cold Clouds • Observation: Light precipitation has been observed in the form of individual ice crystals. • Aggregation or accretion never occurred! • Drizzle or very light rain could have originated from melted ice crystals.

  25. Process • Cumulus clouds develop at temperatures warmer than 0C. • OR, at least warm enough to keep drops from freezing. • Vertical Growth occurs to altitudes higher than 0C level. • Ice crystal formation likely to occur. • Both coalescence (initially) and ice-processes occur. • Which dominates? • Temperature at cloud top, cloud liquid water content, and droplet concentration. • Coalescence - warm clouds, high liquid water content, low drop concentrations.

  26. How Fast? Precipitation: Initiated when particles having mass of 4g are formed.

  27. Meteorology 342 Homework (5) 1. Problem 9.1 2. A cloud which is cylindrical in shape has a cross-sectional area of 10 square kilometers and a height of 3 kilometers. The whole volume of the cloud is initially supercooled and the liquid water content is 2 grams per cubic meter. If all of the water in the cloud is transferred onto ice nuclei present in a uniform concentration of 1 nuclei per liter, calculate the mass of each ice crystal produced and the total number of ice crystals in the cloud. If all the ice crystals produce precipitate and melt before they reach the ground, what will be the total rainfall produced? 3. Calculate the time required for the diameter of a spherical snowflake to increase from 1 mm to 1 cm if it grows by aggregation as it falls through a cloud of small ice crystals present in an amount of 1 gram per cubic meter. You may assume that the collection efficiency is unity, that the density of the snowflake is 100 kilograms per cubic meter, and that the difference in the fall speeds of the snowflake and the ice crystals is constant and equal to 1 meter per second.

  28. 5.6 Shape of ice crystals  General Shapes Basic Habits 

  29. Shapes

  30. More Shapes...

  31. Aggregates

  32. More Shapes

  33. 5.7 Models of liquid and ice clouds Flow Charts

  34. More Flow Charts

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