posted on 2023-03-30, 17:35authored byZachary
R. Schiffman, Marium S. Fernanders, Ryan D. Davis, Margaret A. Tolbert
Mineral dust can indirectly impact
climate by nucleation of atmospheric
solids, for example, by heterogeneously nucleating ice in mixed-phase
clouds or by impacting the phase of aerosols and clouds through contact
nucleation. The effectiveness toward nucleation of individual components
of mineral dust requires further study. Here, the nucleation behavior
of metal oxide nanoparticle components of atmospheric mineral dust
is investigated. A long-working-distance optical trap is used to study
contact and immersion nucleation of ammonium sulfate by transition-metal
oxides, and an environmental chamber is used to probe depositional
ice nucleation on metal oxide particles. Previous theory dictates
that ice nucleation and heterogeneous nucleation of atmospheric salts
can be impacted by several factors including morphology, lattice match,
and surface area. Here, we observe a correlation between the cationic
oxidation states of the metal oxide heterogeneous nuclei and their
effectiveness in causing nucleation in both contact efflorescence
mode and depositional freezing mode. In contrast to the activity of
contact efflorescence, the same metal oxide particles did not cause
a significant increase in efflorescence relative humidity when immersed
in the droplet. These experiments suggest that metal speciation, possibly
as a result of cationic charge sites, may play a role in the effectiveness
of nucleation that is initiated at particle surfaces.