4.7 Article

Chemical characteristics of freezing rain observed at Mount Heng in southern China

Journal

ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT
Volume 281, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.atmosenv.2022.119140

Keywords

Freezing rain; Supercooled water; Chemical composition; Air pollution; Mount Heng

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [42077204]
  2. Second Tibetan Plateau Comprehensive Scientific Expedition [2019QZKK0104]
  3. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Discovery grant of RES

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Freezing rain is a precipitation phenomenon that occurs when snow melts into supercooled water drops before reaching the sub-freezing surface. This study collected winter precipitation samples from Mt. Heng in southern China for 7 years and found that freezing rain had acidic properties with major ions including NH4+, Ca2+, SO42-, and NO3-. The concentrations of these ions in freezing rain can lower the freezing point of supercooled drops and increase the likelihood of freezing, but the presence of ice nuclei can counteract this effect. More model simulations and laboratory experiments are needed to further understand the relationship between air pollution and freezing rain.
Freezing rain usually occurs when snow falls into an above-freezing layer aloft where it melts before reaching the sub-freezing surface as supercooled water. Although the occurrence of freezing rain is uncommon, it can produce extremely costly impacts. To date, field chemical observations of supercooled drops that form freezing rain are lacking. In this study, we collected 101 precipitation (freezing rain/rain/snow) samples on Mt. Heng in southern China for 7 years in the winters between 2015 and 2021. The winter precipitation collected at Mt. Heng was mostly acidic with pH values lower than 5. Acidity, contributed from NO3- and SO42-, was neutralized by NH4+ and Ca2+, indicating the additional contribution from organic acids. The major ions were NH4+, Ca2+, SO42- and NO3-, with concentrations of 135.7, 86.3, 72.5 and 61.8 mu eq L-1, respectively. In general, the total ionic concentrations of freezing rain were, in comparison with mountain-based observations elsewhere, lower than those in cloud water but higher than those in rain. The higher concentrations of major ions in freezing rain would depress the freezing point of supercooled water drops and act to reduce the likelihood of freezing with effects increasing with concentration. This process would be countered by the presence of ice nuclei that is acting to freeze supercooled drops. These opposing processes complicate the understanding of the onset of freezing and consequently the occurrence of freezing rain. This study highlighted that additional model simulations and laboratory experiments are needed to validate the relationship between air pollution and freezing rain.

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