Published September 12, 2024
| Version v1
Journal article
Open
The impact of ammonia on particle formation in the Asian Tropopause Aerosol Layer
Creators
-
Xenofontos, Christos1
-
Kohl, Matthias2
- Ruhl, Samuel2
- Almeida, João3
- Beckmann, Hannah M.4
- Caudillo-Plath, Lucía5
- Ehrhart, Sebastian2
-
Höhler, Kristina6
- Kaniyodical Sebastian, Milin6
- Kong, Weimeng7
- Kunkler, Felix2
- Onnela, Antti3
- Rato, Pedro3
- Russell, Douglas M.5
- Simon, Mario8
- Stark, Leander9
- Umo, Nsikanabasi Silas6
-
Unfer, Gabriela R.10
- Yang, Boxing11
- Yu, Wenjuan12
- Wang, Mingyi13
- 1. The Cyprus Institute
- 2. Max Planck Institute for Chemistry
- 3. CERN
- 4. University of Tartu
- 5. Goethe University Frankfurt
- 6. Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
- 7. California Institute of Technology
- 8. Goethe University
- 9. University of Innsbruck
- 10. Leibniz Institute for Tropospheric Research
- 11. Paul Scherrer Institute
- 12. University of Helsinki
- 13. University of Chicago
Description
During summer, ammonia emissions in Southeast Asia influence air pollution and cloud formation. Convective transport by the South Asian monsoon carries these pollutant air masses into the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere (UTLS), where they accumulate under anticyclonic flow conditions. This air mass accumulation is thought to contribute to particle formation and the development of the Asian Tropopause Aerosol Layer (ATAL). Despite the known influence of ammonia and particulate ammonium on air pollution, a comprehensive understanding of the ATAL is lacking. In this modelling study, the influence of ammonia on particle formation is assessed with emphasis on the ATAL. We use the EMAC chemistry-climate model, incorporating new particle formation parameterisations derived from experiments at the CERN CLOUD chamber. Our diurnal cycle analysis confirms that new particle formation mainly occurs during daylight, with a 10-fold enhancement in rate. This increase is prominent in the South Asian monsoon UTLS, where deep convection introduces high ammonia levels from the boundary layer, compared to a baseline scenario without ammonia. Our model simulations reveal that this ammonia-driven particle formation and growth contributes to an increase of up to 80% in cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) concentrations at cloud-forming heights in the South Asian monsoon region. We find that ammonia profoundly influences the aerosol mass and composition in the ATAL through particle growth, as indicated by an order of magnitude increase in nitrate levels linked to ammonia emissions. However, the effect of ammonia-driven new particle formation on aerosol mass in the ATAL is relatively small. Ammonia emissions enhance the regional aerosol optical depth (AOD) for shortwave solar radiation by up to 70%. We conclude that ammonia has a pronounced effect on the ATAL development, composition, the regional AOD, and CCN concentrations.
Notes
Data availability
A permanent identifier (https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12743399) has been assigned in Zenodo under the 'CERN CLOUD experiment community', which includes the EMAC configuration files, namelist set-up, chemical mechanisms, and details on the emissions set-up. The full dataset shown in the figures is also available to ensure long-term availability and facilitate reproducibility.Files
s41612-024-00758-3.pdf
Files
(3.8 MB)
| Name | Size | Download all |
|---|---|---|
|
Supplementary information md5:68745924125fe5ded2a566d51072b8f4 |
1.3 MB | Preview Download |
|
Article md5:4cd0f9df03f1611ebd9fab2fbbc6ecb7 |
2.4 MB | Preview Download |
Additional details
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1038/s41612-024-00758-3
- Other
- oai:uchicago.tind.io:14467
Funding
- Projekt DEAL
- European Organization for Nuclear Research
- European Union
- Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme
- European Union
- MSCA Doctoral Network
- Academy of Finland
- 337549
- Academy of Finland
- 337552
- Academy of Finland
- 337550
- Academy of Finland
- 1325656
- Academy of Finland
- 302958
- Academy of Finland
- 311932
- Academy of Finland
- 334792
- Academy of Finland
- 316114
- Academy of Finland
- 325647
- Academy of Finland
- 325681
- Academy of Finland
- 347782
- Academy of Finland
- 346371
- Jane and Aatos Erkko Foundation
- Wihuri foundation
- European Research Council
- 742206
- Research Council of Finland
- 349659
- National Science Foundation
- AGS-2132089
- German Federal Ministry of Education and Research
- 01LK2201A
- Federal Ministry of Education and Research
- 01LK2201B
- Swiss National Science Foundation
- 200021_213071
- NASA
- 80NSSC19K0949