6533b82afe1ef96bd128c123

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Susceptibility of contrail ice crystal numbers to aircraft soot particle emissions

Christiane VoigtChristiane VoigtBernd Kärcher

subject

Supersaturation010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesIce crystalsMeteorologymedicine.disease_causeAtmospheric sciences01 natural sciencesSoot010305 fluids & plasmasGeophysicsParticle emission0103 physical sciencesmedicineIce nucleusGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesEnvironmental scienceCirrusSublimation (phase transition)Water vapor0105 earth and related environmental sciences

description

We develop an idealized, physically-based model describing combined effects of ice nucleation and sublimation on ice crystal number during persistent contrail formation. Our study represents the first effort to predict ice numbers at the point where contrails transition into contrail cirrus—several minutes past formation—by connecting them to aircraft soot particle emissions and atmospheric supersaturation with respect to ice. Results averaged over an observed exponential distribution of ice supersaturation (mean value 15%) indicate that large reductions in soot particle numbers are needed to lower contrail ice crystal numbers significantly for soot emission indices around 1015 (kg-fuel)−1, because reductions in nucleated ice number are partially compensated by sublimation losses. Variations in soot particle (−50%) and water vapor (+10%) emission indices at threefold lower soot emissions resulting from biofuel blending cause ice crystal numbers to change by −35% and <5%, respectively. The efficiency of reduction depends on ice supersaturation and the size distribution of nucleated ice crystals in jet exhaust plumes and on atmospheric ice supersaturation, making the latter another key factor in contrail mitigation. We expect our study to have important repercussions for planning airborne measurements targeting contrail formation, designing parameterization schemes for use in large-scale models, reducing uncertainties in predicting contrail cirrus and mitigating the climate impact of aviation.

https://doi.org/10.1002/2017gl074949