Evaluation of factors controlling global secondary organic aerosol production from cloud processes

C. He, J. Liu, A. G. Carlton, S. Fan, L. W. Horowitz, H. Levy, S. Tao

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

24 Scopus citations

Abstract

Secondary organic aerosols (SOA) exert a significant influence on ambient air quality and regional climate. Recent field, laboratorial and modeling studies have confirmed that in-cloud processes contribute to a large fraction of SOA production with large space-time heterogeneity. This study evaluates the key factors that govern the production of cloud-process SOA (SOAcld) on a global scale based on the GFDL coupled chemistry-climate model AM3 in which full cloud chemistry is employed. The association between SOAcld production rate and six factors (i.e., liquid water content (LWC), total carbon chemical loss rate (TCloss), temperature, VOC/NOx, OH, and O 3) is examined. We find that LWC alone determines the spatial pattern of SOAcld production, particularly over the tropical, subtropical and temperate forest regions, and is strongly correlated with SOAcld production. TCloss ranks the second and mainly represents the seasonal variability of vegetation growth. Other individual factors are essentially uncorrelated spatiotemporally to SOAcld production. We find that the rate of SOAcld production is simultaneously determined by both LWC and TCloss, but responds linearly to LWC and nonlinearly (or concavely) to TCloss. A parameterization based on LWC and TCloss can capture well the spatial and temporal variability of the process-based SOAcld formation (R 2 Combining double low line 0.5) and can be easily applied to global three dimensional models to represent the SOA production from cloud processes.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1913-1926
Number of pages14
JournalAtmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Volume13
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 2013

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Evaluation of factors controlling global secondary organic aerosol production from cloud processes'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this