1 / 47

MET215: Advanced Physical Meteorology Ice Clouds: Nucleation and Growth

MET215: Advanced Physical Meteorology Ice Clouds: Nucleation and Growth. Menglin S. Jin. Sources: Steve Platnick. Diffusional growth can’t explain production of precipitation sizes!. Review:. Water Droplet Growth - Condensation.

kylar
Download Presentation

MET215: Advanced Physical Meteorology Ice Clouds: Nucleation and Growth

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. MET215: Advanced Physical Meteorology Ice Clouds: Nucleation and Growth Menglin S. Jin Sources: Steve Platnick

  2. Diffusional growth can’t explain production of precipitation sizes! Review: Water Droplet Growth - Condensation Evolution of droplet size spectra w/time (w/T∞ dependence for G understood): With senv in % (note this is the value after nucleation, << smax): *From Twomey, p. 103. T=10C, s=0.05% => for small r0: r ~ 18 µm after 1 hour (3600 s) r ~ 62 µm after 12 hours Platnick

  3. Cold Cloud Processes Warm Cloud Processes Platnick

  4. review

  5. Ice Clouds: Nucleation and Growth • Nucleation • – Homogeneous, heterogeneous, ice nuclei • – Habits (shapes) Sources: Steve Platnick

  6. Ice Clouds: Nucleation and Growth • Nucleation • – Homogeneous, heterogeneous, ice nuclei • – Habits (shapes) • Ice crystal growth • – Growth from vapor (diffusion) • – Bergeron process (growth at expense of water droplets) • – Ice multiplication process • – Collision/coalescence (riming, aggregation) • Size distributions – Microphysical measurements, temperature dependencies Sources: Steve Platnick

  7. Ice Clouds – Nucleation • Some nucleation pathways • Homogeneous freezing of solution droplets (w/out assistance of aerosol particles) • requires very cold temperatures (~ -40 C and below) • Heterogeneous freezing (via aerosol particles that may or may not contain/be imbedded in water). Ice nuclei not well understood. • Contact freezing (ice nuclei contact with solution droplet) • Deposition on ice nuclei • reference: P. Demott, p. 102, “Cirrus”, Oxford Univ Press, 2002; Rogers and Yau, “A short course in cloud physics”. Platnick

  8. Homogeneous Freezing - conceptual schematic • Water molecules arrange themselves into a lattice. • Embryo grows by chance aggregation . • Ice nucleus cluster number/concentrations are in constant flux • in equilibrium, molecular clusters in Boltzmann distribution • Chance aggregation number/concentrations increases with decreasing temperature. ice embryo

  9. Ice Molecules Arranged in Lattice Liquid water Freezing Ice

  10. Ice Clouds – Heterogeneous Nucleation • Overview • Vapor deposition directly to aerosol particle (insoluble or perhaps dry soluble particles). • Contact freezing: particle collides with water droplet • Condensation freezing: from mixed aerosol particle (soluble component of particle initiates condensation, insoluble component causes freezing instantly) • Immersion freezing: same as above but insoluble particle causes freezing at a later time, e.g., at a colder temperature (but at temperatures greater than for homogeneous freezing) • Theoretical basis less certain than for homogeneous freezing. • Ice nuclei • minerals (clay), organic material (bacteria), soot, pure substances (AgI) • Deposition requires high supersaturation w.r.t. ice (e.g., 20% for AgI at -60 C, Detwiler & Vonnegut, 1981).

  11. Heterogeneous Freezing - conceptual schematic • Freezing is aided by foreign substances, ice nuclei • Ice nuclei provide a surface for liquid water to form ice structure • Ice embryo starts at a larger size • Freezing occurs at warmer temperatures than for homogeneous freezing ice nuclei

  12. Heterogeneous Freezing - conceptual schematic • Contact • Water droplet freezes instantaneously upon contact with ice nuclei • Condensation followed by instantaneous freezing • Nuclei acts as CCN, then insoluble component freezes droplet

  13. Heterogeneous Freezing - conceptual schematic • Immersion • Ice nuclei causes freezing sometime after becoming embedded within droplet • Deposition • Ice forms directly from vapor phase

  14. Ice Clouds – Ice Nuclei (IN) • Measured ice particle number concentration: < 1/liter to ~10/liter • Large discrepancies between measured IN and ice number concentration • IN vary with temperature, humidity, supersaturation. • Secondary production (limited understanding): • shattering of existing crystals • splintering of freezing drops • Other • In situ measurement problems

  15. main types Ice Crystal Habits • Variables • Temperature • primary • Supersaturation • secondary • Electric Field • minor Platnick

  16. c axis a axis basal face prism face Platnick

  17. Ice Nuclei (IN), cont. • Internal nuclei • Water ice lattice held together by hydrogen bonds. Aerosol with hydrogen bonds at surface with similar bond strengths, as well as rotational symmetry which exposes H-bonding groups allowing interaction with water molecules, will be good IN. Example: organics. • Geometrical arrangement of aerosol surface molecules also important. Surface matching ice lattice structure will serve as good IN (e.g., AgI). Best IN will have similar bond length. Bond length differences give rise to stresses which creates an energy barrier to nucleation. Therefore expect easier nucleation at colder temperatures. See Pruppacher & Klett, Fig. 9-12. • Lab experiments indicate that ice nucleation is a local phenomenon proceeding at different active sites on the surface. • Contact nuclei • An electric dipole effect? Nucleates at ~5-10 C warmer than same nuclei inside droplet. Platnick

  18. 25 July 2002 (VIPS) 25 July 2002 (VIPS) CPI: 7 July 2002 Ice Cloud MicrophysicsCRYSTAL-FACE, A. Heymsfield Platnick

  19. Ice cloud microphysics, cont. Platnick

  20. Ice Crystal Habits -dependency on temperature and supersaturation Platnick

  21. MODIS ice crystal library habits/shapes Platnick

  22. Magano & Lee (1966)

  23. Ice Particle Growth - Condensation Diffusion growth (C is “capacitance” of particle in units of length, current flow to a conductor analogy for molecular diffusion ): C is a useful analogy, but difficult to analytically quantify except for simple shapes). Note that C = r for spheres, 2p/r for hexagons, … With ice supersaturation defined as: Solution: same as water droplet with C vs. r, Ls vs. L, es,i vs. es,w Platnick

  24. Ice Multiplication Process • Fracture of Ice Crystals • Splintering of Freezing Drops • During ice particle riming under very selective conditions: • Temperature in the range of –3 ° to –8 °C. • A substantial concentration of large cloud droplets (D >25 m). • Large droplets coexisting with small cloud droplets.

  25. Ice Precipitation Particles • At surface: • Hail: alternating layers of clear ice (wet growth) & opaque ice • Graupel: “soft” hail < 1 cm diameter, white opaque pellets, consists of central crystal covered in rimed drops • Sleet: transparent ice, size of rain drops • Snow: coagulation of dendritic crystals Platnick

  26. extras

  27. Ice Nuclei (IN), cont. • Internal nuclei • Nuclei have similar bond length. Bond length differences give rise to stresses which creates an energy barrier to nucleation. Therefore expect easier nucleation at colder temperatures. See Pruppacher & Klett, Fig. 9-12. • Contact nuclei • An electric dipole effect. Nucleates at ~5-10 C warmer than same nuclei inside droplet. c axis length 15 organics 10 . clays 5 AgI a axis length (A) 5 20 PHYS 622 - Clouds, spring ‘04, lect. 5, Platnick

More Related