Modification of the aerosol size distribution within exhaust plumes produced by diesel-powered ships

Aircraft measurements are presented of the interaction of aerosols and stratocumulus cloud within the effluent of ships powered by partial combustion of low‐grade diesel fuel. Two case studies are shown where aerosol is modified by cloud processing over times of 1–2 hours, or

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of Geophysical Research 2001-05, Vol.106 (D9), p.9827-9842
Hauptverfasser: Osborne, Simon R., Johnson, Douglas W., Bower, Keith N., Wood, Robert
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container_title Journal of Geophysical Research
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creator Osborne, Simon R.
Johnson, Douglas W.
Bower, Keith N.
Wood, Robert
description Aircraft measurements are presented of the interaction of aerosols and stratocumulus cloud within the effluent of ships powered by partial combustion of low‐grade diesel fuel. Two case studies are shown where aerosol is modified by cloud processing over times of 1–2 hours, or
doi_str_mv 10.1029/2000JD900391
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Two case studies are shown where aerosol is modified by cloud processing over times of 1–2 hours, or &lt;1 hour accumulatively spent within cloud. One case shows a good example of the Twomey effect, whereby the cloud droplet effective radius reduced and the extinction coefficient increased quite dramatically for a given liquid water content. The other cloudy case shows relatively little cloud perturbation due to the ship aerosol. In both cases a Hoppel dip appears in the dehydrated aerosol spectrum between 0.1 and 0.2 μm diameter and a new mode grows out to about 0.45 μm. Scattering coefficients of particles between 0.1–0.7 μm show that the modified spectra have greater efficiency at scattering solar radiation. A modeling study of one of these cases indicates that aqueous‐phase sulfur chemistry within cloud can explain the aerosol features. By comparison with the concomitant processing of the background aerosol, it is shown that the Hoppel dip and hence critical size for droplet activation lies at larger particle sizes in polluted clouds. A third case study is presented where the plume evolves in a cloud‐free boundary layer. Here no modal growth of the aerosol was seen and the aerosol was diluted primarily by mixing with background air. 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Geophys. Res</addtitle><description>Aircraft measurements are presented of the interaction of aerosols and stratocumulus cloud within the effluent of ships powered by partial combustion of low‐grade diesel fuel. Two case studies are shown where aerosol is modified by cloud processing over times of 1–2 hours, or &lt;1 hour accumulatively spent within cloud. One case shows a good example of the Twomey effect, whereby the cloud droplet effective radius reduced and the extinction coefficient increased quite dramatically for a given liquid water content. The other cloudy case shows relatively little cloud perturbation due to the ship aerosol. In both cases a Hoppel dip appears in the dehydrated aerosol spectrum between 0.1 and 0.2 μm diameter and a new mode grows out to about 0.45 μm. Scattering coefficients of particles between 0.1–0.7 μm show that the modified spectra have greater efficiency at scattering solar radiation. A modeling study of one of these cases indicates that aqueous‐phase sulfur chemistry within cloud can explain the aerosol features. By comparison with the concomitant processing of the background aerosol, it is shown that the Hoppel dip and hence critical size for droplet activation lies at larger particle sizes in polluted clouds. A third case study is presented where the plume evolves in a cloud‐free boundary layer. Here no modal growth of the aerosol was seen and the aerosol was diluted primarily by mixing with background air. 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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; Wiley Online Library Free Content; Wiley-Blackwell AGU Digital Library; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Applied sciences
Atmospheric pollution
Earth, ocean, space
Exact sciences and technology
External geophysics
Marine
Meteorology
Particles and aerosols
Pollutants physicochemistry study: properties, effects, reactions, transport and distribution
Pollution
title Modification of the aerosol size distribution within exhaust plumes produced by diesel-powered ships
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