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Microphysics of Cold Clouds

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Microphysics of Cold Clouds. Objectives ... Be able to explain why concentrations of ice crystals in cloud exceed ice nuclei concentrations ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Microphysics of Cold Clouds


1
Microphysics of Cold Clouds
2
Microphysics of Cold Clouds
  • Reading
  • Wallace Hobbs
  • pp 232 245

3
Microphysics of Cold Clouds
  • Objectives
  • Be able to define cold clouds, mixed phase cloud
    and glaciated cloud
  • Be able to define supercooled liquid water
  • Be able to define homogeneous and heterogeneous
    nucleation

4
Microphysics of Cold Clouds
  • Objectives
  • Be able to generally describe the process of
    homogeneous nucleation
  • Be able to recall the relationship between
    homogeneous nucleation, temperature and drop
    size
  • Be able to generally describe why heterogeneous
    nucleation occurs at warmer temperatures

5
Microphysics of Cold Clouds
  • Objectives
  • Be able to describe the four different modes of
    heterogeneous nucleation
  • Be able to recall that the temperature of
    heterogeneous nucleation depends on the mode of
    nucleation
  • Be able to define ice nuclei

6
Microphysics of Cold Clouds
  • Objectives
  • Be able to identify the biggest source of ice
    nuclei
  • Be able to recall the Fletcher Relationship of
    ice nuclei size distribution
  • Be able to explain why concentrations of ice
    crystals in cloud exceed ice nuclei
    concentrations

7
Cold Cloud
  • Some Part of Cloud Extends Above 0oC

0oC
8
Mixed Phase Cloud
  • Contains Both Liquid Water Drops and Ice Particles

9
Glaciated Cloud
  • Consists Entirely of Ice Particles

10
Supercooled Liquid Water
  • Liquid Water That Exists at Temperatures Colder
    Than 0oC

11
Supercooled Liquid Water
  • Liquid Water Molecule
  • Hydrogen Bonds

12
Supercooled Liquid Water
  • Metastable State
  • Want to Freeze

13
Fusion
  • Ice
  • Water Molecules Arranged in Lattice

Fusion
Liquid Water
Ice
14
Fusion
  • Homogeneous Nucleation
  • Heterogeneous Nucleation

15
Homogeneous Nucleation
  • Water Molecules Arrange Themselves into a Lattice

Ice Embryo
16
Homogeneous Nucleation
  • Embryo Grows by Chance Aggregation

Ice Embryo
17
Homogeneous Nucleation
  • Ice Nucleus Is in Constant Flux
  • Molecule Come Go

Ice Embryo
18
Homogeneous Nucleation
  • Chance Aggregation Increases with Decreasing
    Temperature

Ice Embryo
19
Homogeneous Nucleation
  • Chance Aggregation Also Depends on Drop Size (or
    Surface Tension)

Ice Embryo
20
Homogeneous Nucleation
  • Ice Embryo Must Reach Critical Size Before Fusion
    Occurs Spontaneously

Ice Embryo
21
Homogeneous Nucleation
  • Spontaneous Nucleation Occurs At

5 mm
-39oC
22
Homogeneous Nucleation
  • Spontaneous Nucleation Occurs At

5 mm
40 mm
-36oC
-39oC
23
Homogeneous Nucleation
  • Spontaneous Nucleation Rarely Occurs in the
    Atmosphere

24
Fusion
  • Homogeneous Nucleation
  • Heterogeneous Nucleation

25
Heterogeneous Nucleation
  • Fusion Is Aided by Foreign Substances Called Ice
    Nuclei

Ice Nuclei
26
Heterogeneous Nucleation
  • Ice Nuclei Provide a Surface for Liquid Water to
    Attach

Ice Nuclei
27
Heterogeneous Nucleation
  • Ice Embryo Starts At a Larger Size

Ice Nuclei
28
Heterogeneous Nucleation
  • Fusion Occurs at Much Warmer Temperature

Ice Nuclei
-39oC
29
Heterogeneous Nucleation Modes
  • Condensation Followed by Freezing
  • Contact
  • Immersion
  • Deposition

30
Heterogeneous Nucleation Modes
  • Condensation Followed by Freezing
  • Ice nuclei acts as CCN, then freezes droplet

31
Heterogeneous Nucleation Modes
  • Contact
  • Water droplet freezes instantaneously upon
    contact with ice nuclei

32
Heterogeneous Nucleation Modes
  • Immersion
  • Causes freezing after becoming embedded within
    droplet

33
Heterogeneous Nucleation Modes
  • Deposition
  • Ice forms directly from vapor

34
Heterogeneous Nucleation Modes
  • One particle may nucleate in different ways

35
Heterogeneous Nucleation Modes
  • Temperature at which nucleation occurs also
    depends on mode

36
Ice Nuclei
  • Any particle that serves as a nucleus leading to
    the formation of ice crystals without regard to
    the particular physical processes involved in the
    nucleation.

Glossary of Meteorology
37
Ice Nuclei
  • Crystal Structure Similar to Ice
  • Nucleate at warmer temperatures

38
Ice Nuclei
  • Pure Substances
  • Minerals
  • Organic Material

39
Ice Nuclei
40
Ice Nuclei
  • Terrestrial Source Biggest Contributor
  • Ice Nuclei Concentrations Decrease with Altitude
  • More Ice Nuclei in Continental Air

41
Ice Nuclei
  • Measurement Techniques
  • Cloud Chambers
  • Filter Systems

42
Ice Nuclei
  • Measurement Problems
  • Do not know mode of activation
  • Contact, Immersion or Condensation Followed by
    Freezing?
  • History of Aerosol
  • Trained or Preactivated Ice Nuclei
  • May Not Activate Until Later

43
Ice Nuclei
  • High Degree of Variablity
  • Order of Magnitude

44
Ice Nuclei
  • Observed Concentrations (Active)

45
Ice Nuclei
  • Fletcher Relationship
  • 1/L _at_ -20oC
  • Decreases by order of magnitude every 4oC

100
10
Concentration (/L)
1
.1
.01
.001
-10
-20
-15
-25
Temperature (oC)
46
Ice Nuclei
  • Fletcher Relationship

100
10
1
Concentration (/L)
.1
.01
.001
-10
-20
-15
-25
a .6 N concentration per liter DT cha
nge in temperature
Temperature (oC)
47
Ice Nuclei
  • Typical aerosol concentration about 104 cm-3
  • One in 10 billion (108) aerosols acts as an ice
    nuclei (at -20oC)

100
10
1
Concentration (/L)
.1
.01
.001
-10
-20
-15
-25
Temperature (oC)
48
Ice in Cloud
  • Observed Concentrations
  • Much Higher Than Ice Nuclei Concentrations

49
Ice in Cloud
  • Depends Upon
  • Temperature
  • Age of Cloud
  • Type of Cloud

50
Ice in Cloud
  • Observed Concentrations
  • Increases with Decreasing Temperature

51
Ice in Cloud
  • Probability of ice crystals

52
Ice in Cloud
  • Probability of ice crystals increases with age of
    cloud
  • Old clouds
  • Glaciated
  • Higher concentrations
  • Young Clouds
  • Water droplets

53
Ice in Cloud
  • Higher probability of ice crystals in stratus
    than in cumulus of same cloud top temperature

54
Ice in Cloud
  • Higher ice crystal concentrations in clouds with
    broad spectra

55
Ice in Cloud
  • Discrepancy Between
  • Ice Nuclei Concentration
  • Observed Ice Crystal Concentration

56
Ice in Cloud
  • Primary Method
  • Heterogeneous Nucleation

57
Ice in Cloud
  • Seconday Method
  • Ice Multiplication Process
  • Fracture of Ice Crystals
  • Splintering of Freezing Drops

58
Ice Multiplication Process
  • Fracture of Ice Crystals

59
Ice Multiplication Process
  • Splintering of Freezing Drops
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