TY - JOUR
T1 - Does marine surface tension have global biogeography? Addition for the OCEANFILMS package
AU - Elliott, Scott
AU - Burrows, Susannah
AU - Cameron-Smith, Philip
AU - Hoffman, Forrest
AU - Hunke, Elizabeth
AU - Jeffery, Nicole
AU - Liu, Yina
AU - Maltrud, Mathew
AU - Menzo, Zachary
AU - Ogunro, Oluwaseun
AU - Van Roekel, Luke
AU - Wang, Shanlin
AU - Brunke, Michael
AU - Jin, Meibing
AU - Letscher, Robert
AU - Meskhidze, Nicholas
AU - Russell, Lynn
AU - Simpson, Isla
AU - Stokes, Dale
AU - Wingenter, Oliver
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 by the authors.
PY - 2018/6/4
Y1 - 2018/6/4
N2 - We apply principles of Gibbs phase plane chemistry across the entire ocean-atmosphere interface to investigate aerosol generation and geophysical transfer issues. Marine surface tension differences comprise a tangential pressure field controlling trace gas fluxes, primary organic inputs, and sea spray salt injections, in addition to heat and momentum fluxes. Mapping follows from the organic microlayer composition, now represented in ocean system models. Organic functional variations drive the microforcing, leading to (1) reduced turbulence and (by extension) laminar gas-energy diffusion; plus (2) altered bubble film mass emission into the boundary layer. Interfacial chemical behaviors are, therefore, closely reviewed as the background. We focus on phase transitions among two dimensional "solid, liquid, and gaseous" states serving as elasticity indicators. From the pool of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) only proteins and lipids appear to occupy significant atmospheric interfacial areas. The literature suggests albumin and stearic acid as the best proxies, and we distribute them through ecodynamic simulation. Consensus bulk distributions are obtained to control their adsorptive equilibria. We devise parameterizations for both the planar free energy and equation of state, relating excess coverage to the surface pressure and its modulus. Constant settings for the molecular surrogates are drawn from laboratory study and successfully reproduce surfactant solid-to-gas occurrence in compression experiments. Since DOC functionality measurements are rare, we group them into super-ecological province tables to verify aqueous concentration estimates. Outputs are then fed into a coverage, tension, elasticity code. The resulting two dimensional pressure contours cross a critical range for the regulation of precursor piston velocity, bubble breakage, and primary aerosol sources plus ripple damping. Concepts extend the water-air adsorption theory currently embodied in our OCEANFILMS aerosol emissions package, and the two approaches could be inserted into Earth System Models together. Uncertainties in the logic include kinetic and thermochemical factors operating at multiple scales.
AB - We apply principles of Gibbs phase plane chemistry across the entire ocean-atmosphere interface to investigate aerosol generation and geophysical transfer issues. Marine surface tension differences comprise a tangential pressure field controlling trace gas fluxes, primary organic inputs, and sea spray salt injections, in addition to heat and momentum fluxes. Mapping follows from the organic microlayer composition, now represented in ocean system models. Organic functional variations drive the microforcing, leading to (1) reduced turbulence and (by extension) laminar gas-energy diffusion; plus (2) altered bubble film mass emission into the boundary layer. Interfacial chemical behaviors are, therefore, closely reviewed as the background. We focus on phase transitions among two dimensional "solid, liquid, and gaseous" states serving as elasticity indicators. From the pool of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) only proteins and lipids appear to occupy significant atmospheric interfacial areas. The literature suggests albumin and stearic acid as the best proxies, and we distribute them through ecodynamic simulation. Consensus bulk distributions are obtained to control their adsorptive equilibria. We devise parameterizations for both the planar free energy and equation of state, relating excess coverage to the surface pressure and its modulus. Constant settings for the molecular surrogates are drawn from laboratory study and successfully reproduce surfactant solid-to-gas occurrence in compression experiments. Since DOC functionality measurements are rare, we group them into super-ecological province tables to verify aqueous concentration estimates. Outputs are then fed into a coverage, tension, elasticity code. The resulting two dimensional pressure contours cross a critical range for the regulation of precursor piston velocity, bubble breakage, and primary aerosol sources plus ripple damping. Concepts extend the water-air adsorption theory currently embodied in our OCEANFILMS aerosol emissions package, and the two approaches could be inserted into Earth System Models together. Uncertainties in the logic include kinetic and thermochemical factors operating at multiple scales.
KW - Biogeochemical mapping
KW - Compression
KW - Elasticity
KW - Gas precursors
KW - Heat and momentum flux
KW - Interfacial surface tension and pressure
KW - Lipids
KW - Organic macromolecules
KW - Primary aerosol
KW - Proteins
KW - Surfactants
KW - Two dimensional equation of state
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85048391486
U2 - 10.3390/atmos9060216
DO - 10.3390/atmos9060216
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85048391486
SN - 2073-4433
VL - 9
JO - Atmosphere
JF - Atmosphere
IS - 6
M1 - 216
ER -