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Article Dans Une Revue Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics Discussions Année : 2007

Contribution of carbonaceous aerosol to cloud condensation nuclei: processes and uncertainties evaluated with a global aerosol microphysics model

Résumé

This paper explores the impacts of carbonaceous aerosol on cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) concentrations in a global climate model with size-resolved aerosol microphysics. Organic matter (OM) and elemental carbon (EC) from two emissions inventories were incorporated into a preexisting model with sulfate and sea-salt aerosol. The addition of carbonaceous aerosol increased CCN(0.2%) concentrations by 65?90% in the globally averaged surface layer depending on the carbonaceous emissions inventory used. Sensitivity studies were performed to determine the relative importance of the organic "solute effect", in which CCN concentrations increase because of the added soluble carbonaceous material, versus the "seeding effect", in which CCN concentrations increase because of increased particle number concentrations. In a sensitivity study where carbonaceous aerosol was assumed to be completely insoluble, concentrations of CCN(0.2%) still increased by 40?50% globally over the no carbonaceous simulation because primary carbonaceous emissions were able to become CCN via condensation of sulfuric acid. This shows that approximately half of the contribution of carbonaceous particles to CCN comes from the "seeding effect" and half from the "solute effect". The solute effect tends to dominate more in areas where there is less inorganic aerosol than organic aerosol and the seeding effect tends to dominate in areas where is more inorganic aerosol than organic aerosol. It was found that an accurate simulation of the number size distribution is necessary to predict the CCN concentration but assuming an average chemical composition will generally give a CCN concentration within a factor of 2. If a "typical" size distribution is assumed for each species when calculating CCN, such as is done in bulk aerosol models, the mean error relative to a simulation with size resolved microphysics is on the order of 35%. Predicted values of carbonaceous aerosol mass and aerosol number were compared to observations and the model showed average errors of a factor of 3 for carbonaceous mass and a factor of 4 for total aerosol number. These errors may be reduced by improving the emission size distributions of both primary sulfate and primary carbonaceous aerosol.
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Dates et versions

hal-00302845 , version 1 (18-06-2008)

Identifiants

  • HAL Id : hal-00302845 , version 1

Citer

J. R. Pierce, K. Chen, P. J. Adams. Contribution of carbonaceous aerosol to cloud condensation nuclei: processes and uncertainties evaluated with a global aerosol microphysics model. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics Discussions, 2007, 7 (3), pp.7723-7765. ⟨hal-00302845⟩

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