학술논문

The Urmia playa as a source of airborne dust and ice-nucleating particles - Part 2: Unraveling the relationship between soil dust composition and ice nucleation activity
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics. November 23, 2022, Vol. 22 Issue 22, 14931
Subject
Global temperature changes -- Analysis
Soils, Salts in -- Analysis
Arid regions -- Analysis
Clay minerals -- Analysis
Earth sciences
Analysis
Language
English
ISSN
1680-7316
Abstract
Ice-nucleating particles (INPs) originating from deserts, semi-arid regions, and dried lakebeds may cause heterogeneous ice nucleation, impacting cloud properties. Recently, due to climate change and water scarcity, abandoned agricultural lands with little surficial crust and negligible vegetation cover have become an increasing source of atmospheric dust worldwide. Unlike deserts, these areas are rich in soluble salt and (bio-)organic compounds. Using soil samples from various sites of the Lake Urmia playa (LUP) in northwestern Iran and airborne dusts collected at nearby meteorological stations, we elucidate how minerals, soluble salts, and organic matter interact to determine the IN activity of saline soils and dust. X-ray powder diffraction shows that the mineralogical composition is dominated by K-feldspars (microcline), quartz, carbonates, and clay minerals. The samples were stripped stepwise of organic matter, carbonates, and soluble salts. After each removal step, the ice nucleation (IN) activity was quantified in terms of onset freezing temperatures (T.sub.het) and heterogeneously frozen fractions (F.sub.het) by emulsion freezing experiments using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). We examined the influence of soluble salts and pH on microcline and quartz in emulsion freezing experiments, comparing these with reference suspensions of microcline and quartz exposed to salt concentrations and pH levels characteristic of the LUP samples. These analyses, combined with correlations between T.sub.het and F.sub.het, allow us to identify the components that contribute to or inhibit IN activity. The LUP dusts turn out to be very good INPs, with freezing onset temperatures around 248 K in immersion freezing experiments. Interestingly, their IN activity proves to be dominated by the relatively small share of (bio-)organic matter (1 %-5.3 %). After organic matter removal, the remaining IN activity (T.sub.het â244 K) can be traced back to the clay fraction, because T.sub.het and F.sub.het correlate positively with the clay mineral content but negatively with quartz and microcline. We attribute the inability of quartz and microcline to act as INPs to the basic pH of the LUP samples as well as to the presence of soluble salts. After additionally removing soluble salts and carbonates, the IN activity of the samples increased again significantly (T.sub.het â249 K), and the negative correlation with quartz and microcline turned into a slightly positive one. Removing carbonates and salts from the natural samples leads to an increase in T.sub.het and F.sub.het as well, indicating that their presence also suppresses the IN activity of the (bio-)organic INPs. Overall, this study demonstrates that mineral and organic INPs do not just add up to yield the IN activity of soil dust but that the freezing behavior is governed by inhibiting and promoting interactions between the components.
Byline: Nikou Hamzehpour, Claudia Marcolli, Kristian Klumpp, Debora Thöny, Thomas Peter To access, purchase, authenticate, or subscribe to the full-text of this article, please visit this link: https://acp.copernicus.org/articles/22/14931/2022/acp-22-14931-2022.html, or to [...]