Title: Todays lecture objectives:
1ATMS 455 Physical Meteorology
- Todays lecture objectives
- Nucleation of Water Vapor Condensation (WH 4.2)
- What besides water vapor do we need to make a
cloud? Arent all clouds alike?
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2ATMS 455 Physical Meteorology
- Todays lecture topics
- Nucleation of Water Vapor Condensation (WH 4.2)
- Theory
- Cloud condensation nuclei
3Introduction
- Clouds form when air becomes supersaturated wrt
liquid water (or ice, in some cases) - Supersaturation most commonly occurs in the
atmosphere when air parcels ascend, resulting in
expansion and cooling (WH 2.6) - Water vapor condenses onto aerosols forming a
cloud of small water droplets
Andy Aerosol
4Theory
- But do we really need (Andy) aerosol to make a
cloud droplet? What if we made a cloud via
condensation without the aid of aerosols?
Hey!
homogeneous or spontaneous nucleation
5Theory
- Homogeneous (spontaneous) nucleation
- First stage of growth requires chance collisions
of a number of water molecules in the vapor phase
to come together, forming small embryonic water
droplets large enough to remain intact. Will this
happen spontaneously? - ? Spontaneous implies an irreversible process
which implies a total increase in entropy which
implies an upper limit on the change in Gibbs
Free Energy
6Theory
- Homogeneous (spontaneous) nucleation (cont.)
- Recall a system (droplet environment)
approaches an equilibrium state by reducing its
energy (DElt0) in time
7Theory
- Subsaturated conditions (e lt es)
If droplet grows (R increases), then DEgt0, this
wont happen spontaneously.
8Theory
- Subsaturated conditions (e lt es)
- Formation of droplets is not favored
- Random collisions of water molecules do occur,
forming very small embryonic droplets (that
evaporate) - These droplets never grow large enough to become
visible
9Theory
- Supersaturated conditions (e gt es)
If droplet grows (R increases), then DE can be
positive or negative
10Theory
- Supersaturated conditions (e gt es)
- - DE initially increases with increasing R
- DE is a maximum where R r
- DE decreases with increasing R beyond R r
11Theory
- Supersaturated conditions (e gt es)
- Embryonic droplets with R lt r tend to evaporate
- Droplets which grow by chance (collisions) with R
gt r will continue to grow spontaneously by
condensation - They will cause a decrease in the energy (total
energy) of the system
12Theory
- Kelvins formula can be used to
- calculate the radius r of a droplet which will be
in (unstable) equilibrium with air with a given
water vapor pressure e - determine the saturation vapor pressure e over a
droplet of specified radius r
13Theory
- Kelvins formula can be used to
- calculate the radius r of a droplet which will be
in (unstable) equilibrium with air with a given
water vapor pressure e - determine the saturation vapor pressure e over a
droplet of specified radius r - r 0.01 micrometers requires a RH of 112.5
- r 1.0 micrometer requires a RH of 100.12
14Theory
- Supersaturations that develop in natural clouds
due to the adiabatic ascent of air rarely exceed
1 (RH101) - Consequently, droplets do not form in natural
clouds by the homogeneous nucleation of pure
water
15Theory
- droplets do form in natural clouds by the
heterogeneous nucleation process - Cloud droplets grow on atmospheric aerosols
Yes!
16Theory
- Droplets can form and grow on aerosol at much
lower supersaturations than are required for
homogeneous nucleation - Water vapor condenses onto an aerosol 0.3
micrometers in radius, the water film will be in
(unstable) equilibrium with air which has a
supersaturation of 0.4
Aerosols give a boost to the size of a
growing cloud droplet.
17Theory
- Aerosol types
- wettable aerosol that allows water to spread out
on it as a horizontal film - soluble dissolve when water condenses onto them
18Theory
- Soluble aerosols
- solute effect has an important effect on
heterogeneous nucleation - Equilibrium saturation vapor pressure over a
solution droplet (e.g. sodium chloride or
ammonium sulfate) is less than that over a pure
water droplet of the same size
19Theory
- expression may be used to
- Calculate the vapor pressure e of the air
adjacent to a solution droplet of specified
radius r - Calculate the relative humidity of the air
adjacent to a solution droplet of specified
radius r - Calculate the supersaturation of the air adjacent
to a solution droplet of specified radius r
20Theory
Variation of the RH of the air adjacent to a
solution droplet as a function of its radius
21Theory
- Kohler curve
- Below a certain droplet size, the vapor pressure
of the air adjacent to a solution droplet is less
than that which is in equilibrium with a plane
sfc of water at the same temperature - As the droplets increase in size, the solutions
become weaker, the Kelvin curvature effect
becomes the dominant influence - At large radii, the RH of the air adjacent to the
droplets becomes essentially the same as that
over pure water droplets
22Theory
- Focus on curve 2 (solution of 10-19 kg of sodium
chloride)
23Theory
- Curve 2 (solution of 10-19 kg of sodium chloride)
Radius of 0.05 mm ? RH of 90 ? If an initially
dry sodium chloride particle of mass 10-19 kg
were placed in air with RH equal to 90, water
vapor would condense onto the particle, the salt
would dissolve, and a solution droplet of r
0.05 mm would form.
24Theory
- Curve 2 (solution of 10-19 kg of sodium chloride)
RH of 100.2 ? radius of 0.1 mm ? If an initially
dry sodium chloride particle of mass 10-19 kg
were placed in air with RH equal to 100.2, a
solution droplet of r 0.1 mm would form on the
sodium chloride particle
25Theory
- In both examples the droplets that form are in
stable equilibrium with the air since, - if they grew a little more, the vapor pressures
adjacent to their surfaces would rise above that
of the ambient air and they would evaporate back
to their equilibrium size - if they evaporated a little, their vapor
pressures would fall below that of the ambient
air and they would grow back to the equilibrium
size by condensation
26Theory
- Droplets small enough to be in stable equilibrium
with the air are called haze droplets. All
droplets in a state represented by points on the
left hand side of the maxima in the curves shown
in Fig. 4.12 are in the haze state.
27Theory
- Curve 2 (solution of 10-19 kg of sodium
chloride) RH of 100.36 , radius of 0.2 mm
(1) Slight evaporation ? growth by condensation
back to its original size (2) Slight growth ?
growth by condensation ? continued growth ?
activated droplet (a droplet has passed over the
peak in its Kohler curve)
28Theory
- Curve 2 (solution of 10-19 kg of sodium
chloride) RH of 100.4
ambient air RH
Growth by condensation, supersaturation of the
air adjacent to the droplet would rise. Once
droplet reaches peak in Kohler curve,
supersaturation of the air adjacent to the
droplet would still be below that of the ambient
air ? droplet continues to grow by condensation.
29Theory
- Any droplet growing along a curve which has a
peak supersaturation lying below the
supersaturation of the ambient air can form a
cloud droplet (EX1) - Any droplet growing along a Kohler curve which
intersects a horizontal line in Fig. 4.12,
corresponding to the supersaturation of the air,
can only form a haze droplet (2)
EX1
EX2
30Cloud condensation nuclei
- Aerosol which serve as the nuclei upon which
water vapor condenses in the atmosphere are
called cloud condensation nuclei (CCN).
Andy (a.k.a. CCN)
31Cloud condensation nuclei
- CCN types
- soluble the larger the size of an aerosol and
the larger its water solubility, the lower will
be the supersaturation at which it can serve as a
CCN - insoluble the larger the size of an aerosol and
the more readily it is wetted by water, the lower
will be the supersaturation at which it can serve
as a CCN
32Cloud condensation nuclei
- For a given environment of 1 supersaturation
- soluble CCN can be as small as 0.01 mm in radius
- insoluble CCN need to be at least about 0.1 mm
in radius
33Cloud condensation nuclei
- Measuring CCN thermal diffusion chamber
CCN counted using photographs or by measuring the
intensity of light scattered by droplets in the
chamber
34Cloud condensation nuclei
- Near the earths surface, continental air masses
are generally significantly richer in CCN than
are marine air masses
35Cloud condensation nuclei
- Concentrations of CCN over land decline by about
a factor of five between the sfc and 5 km - Concentrations of CCN over the ocean remain
fairly constant with height
36Cloud condensation nuclei
- CCN source region is over land
- Soil and dust particles are not dominant
- Forest fires are sources of CCN
- Sea-salt particles are not a primary source of
CCN - Gas-to-particle conversion mechanisms might be
important sources of CCN - Many CCN consist of sulfates