JOURNAL ARTICLE

The Impact of Cloud Processing on the Ice Nucleation Abilities of Soot Particles at Cirrus Temperatures

Abstract

Abstract Soot particles are generally considered to be poor ice nucleating particles. Involvement of soot in clouds and their release back into the atmosphere can form residual particles with altered cloud forming potential. The impact and extent of such different cloud processing scenarios on ice nucleation is, however, not well understood. In this work, we present the impact of cloud processing of soot aerosols on subsequent ice nucleation cycles at T ≤233 K. Coupling of two continuous flow diffusion chambers allows the simulation of different cloud processing scenarios and investigation of subsequent ice nucleation activity of the processed particles. The processing scenarios presented here encompass contrail, cirrus, and mixed‐phase cloud processing, mimicking typical pathways that soot particles can be exposed to in the atmosphere. For all scenarios tested, the processed particles showed an enhanced ice active fraction for T <233 K. The relative humidity with respect to water for the ice nucleation onset was observed to be on average approximately 10% (relative humidity with respect to ice, R H i ≈16%) lower for the cloud‐processed particles compared to the unprocessed soot for which ice nucleation was observed close to or at homogeneous freezing conditions of solution droplets. We attribute the enhanced ice nucleation abilities of the cloud‐processed soot to a pore condensation and freezing mechanism and have identified key parameters governing these changes. Enhanced ice nucleation abilities of soot in cirrus clouds can have significant impacts, given the importance of the atmospheric ice phase for precipitation formation and global climate.

Keywords:
Ice nucleus Cirrus Nucleation Soot Ice crystals Sea ice growth processes Condensation Atmospheric sciences Cloud condensation nuclei Relative humidity Liquid water content Ice cloud Clear ice Cloud physics Chemical physics Materials science Environmental science Aerosol Cloud computing Chemistry Meteorology Thermodynamics Geology Cryosphere Combustion Physics Sea ice thickness Physical chemistry Sea ice

Metrics

106
Cited By
8.66
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
110
Refs
0.99
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
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Citation History

Topics

Atmospheric chemistry and aerosols
Physical Sciences →  Earth and Planetary Sciences →  Atmospheric Science
Atmospheric aerosols and clouds
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Global and Planetary Change
Atmospheric Ozone and Climate
Physical Sciences →  Earth and Planetary Sciences →  Atmospheric Science

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