4.6 Article

An Improved Representation of Aerosol Wet Removal by Deep Convection and Impacts on Simulated Aerosol Vertical Profiles

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES
Volume 126, Issue 13, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2020JD034173

Keywords

aerosol; cloud microphysics parameterization; wet removal; deep convection

Funding

  1. NASA CloudSat and CALIPSO Science Program [80NSSC20K0952]
  2. U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Atmospheric System Research (ASR) Program (Office of Science, OBER) [DE-SC0018190]
  3. NCAR's Computational and Information Systems Laboratory
  4. U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) [DE-SC0018190] Funding Source: U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)

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In this study, a physics-based aerosol wet removal scheme was introduced with secondary improvements to parameterizations of aerosol activation, resuspension, and cloud-borne aerosol detrainment. Changes in the aerosol wet removal scheme led to a decrease in aerosol concentrations, with the extent of decrease depending on aerosol chemical components. The simulated aerosol profiles were evaluated against aircraft-based observations, showing improved agreement with the new scheme.
We introduce a physics-based aerosol wet removal scheme with unified treatments of aerosol transport and removal by convective clouds into the Community Atmosphere Model version 6. Since several important physical processes are still neglected or poorly represented in this new physics-based scheme, we develop secondary improvements to the parameterizations of aerosol activation, resuspension, and cloud-borne aerosol detrainment in this new scheme. Changes in the aerosol wet removal scheme cause tropospheric aerosol concentrations to decrease to different extents: compared to the control run, the physics-based scheme significantly decreases aerosol burdens by up to 60% over the southern Pacific Ocean, whereas the secondary improvements mitigate the decreasing tendency. The burden changes also depend on aerosol chemical components: the sulfate mass decrease is compensated by secondary production, black carbon (BC) is effectively removed via increasing the hygroscopicity of particulate organic matter from 0 to 0.2, and dust shows the most spatially heterogeneous changes. Simulated aerosol profiles are evaluated against aircraft-based observations over the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans. The secondary-improved scheme reduces the overestimations of upper tropospheric BC and sea salt concentrations by a factor of 10 and 1,000, respectively, and reproduces the dependence of BC mass decrease rates on cloud types. Consideration of convective cloud-borne aerosol detrainment plays the most important role in enhancing the aerosol wet removal and decreasing the positive biases of tropospheric BC and sea salt concentrations. We also summarize unresolved issues related to convective cloud genesis and microphysics, cloud-borne aerosol evolution, and BC and dust emissions.

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