4.7 Article

CCN activation in homogeneous isotropic turbulence: Response to particle characteristics and environmental conditions

Journal

ATMOSPHERIC RESEARCH
Volume 297, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.atmosres.2023.107095

Keywords

Turbulent cloud parcel; DNS; Supersaturation fluctuations; CCN activation

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This study presents Direct Numerical Simulation (DNS) of turbulent cloud parcels and investigates the impact of turbulence on Cloud Condensation Nuclei (CCN) activation. The results show that turbulent fluctuations can lead to some aerosol particles being in an un-activated state while others become cloud droplets. The study also provides insights into the response of cloud microphysical properties to different background conditions through comparative experiments.
Direct Numerical Simulation (DNS) of turbulent cloud parcels are presented where particles evolve in response to the local values in supersaturation (s) led by turbulent fluctuations. A pseudo-spectral DNS is modified to incorporate aerosol particles and Cloud Condensation Nuclei (CCN) activation applying a droplet growth equation based on kappa-Ko center dot hler theory that works for the whole range of warm cloud particles, from un-activated deliquesced aerosol particles to activated cloud droplets, that grow by condensation. The Lagrangian microphysics applied ensures that each particle experiences a supersaturation (fluctuations added to the mean) corresponding to its near-particle gas phase surroundings, which differs from the uniform parcel view where an average value of supersaturation, s, is applied to every particle in the domain. A non-turbulent Lagrangian parcel model with similar mean thermodynamics and CCN properties is compared with turbulent DNS parcels of varying fluctuation intensities to distinguish the impact of turbulence on CCN activation. It is shown that, in a given distribution, a subset of aerosols respond to fluctuations rather than the mean thermodynamics allowing particles of similar dry size to co-exist as un-activated haze particles as well as cloud droplets. The cloud microphysical properties are analysed in a series of DNS experiments with contrasting thermodynamic and aerosol properties. DNS results agrees with the general understanding of aerosol activation and cloud droplets evolution in response to various background conditions such as pristine and polluted aerosol distributions, composition of CCN with respect to organic - inorganic components and magnitude of vertical velocity. DNS considers turbulence-microphysics interactions in such problems providing additional knowledge on the role of turbulence in clouds. It is argued that incorporating turbulent fluctuations in simulating the CCN activation and droplet growth is well reasoned and a constructive way forward.

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