INT-01 SOLAS: Air-Sea interaction
Ice nucleation in mixed organic/inorganic droplets
YaoYao* , College of Ocean and Earth Sciences, Xiamen University, Xiamen, China
Wang Bingbing, College of Ocean and Earth Sciences, Xiamen University, Xiamen, China

Complex organic and inorganics enriched particles have been generally detected in the atmosphere. These particles could take up water and form ice crystals. Currently, the ice nucleation of mixed organic/inorganic particles is not well understood. Here, we investigated the freezing temperatures of aqueous droplets containing poly(ethylene glycol)-400 (PEG400), 3,3-dimethylglutaric acid (DMG) and ammonium sulfate (AS) at different organic-to-inorganic dry mass ratios (OIRs) as representative organic/inorganic model systems using optical microscopy and cryo-cooling stage. The results showed that the freezing temperatures were consistent with the water-activity-based homogeneous freezing temperatures without crystalline solids in aqueous droplets. It indicted that these droplets likely form ice through homogeneous nucleation irrespective of OIR. We found a substantial temperature dependence of water activity for aqueous PEG400-AS droplets. The freezing of ice occurred in the first cycle at lower temperature than in the second cycle in all aqueous DMG-AS droplets due to the crystallized solids acting as heterogeneous ice nuclei. Our work showed that the surface area of crystalline solids presented in aqueous DMG-AS droplets could significantly change the heterogeneous freezing temperature. The ice nucleation induced by organic/inorganic particles may be very important in the formation of upper tropospheric clouds.

Key words: ice nucleation, organic/inorganic particle, aqueous droplet, crystallized solid, surface area