Title: Microphysics of Cold Clouds
 1Microphysics of Cold Clouds 
 2Microphysics of Cold Clouds
- Reading 
- Wallace  Hobbs 
- pp 232  245
3Microphysics of Cold Clouds
- Objectives 
- Be able to define cold clouds, mixed phase cloud 
 and glaciated cloud
 
- Be able to define supercooled liquid water 
- Be able to define homogeneous and heterogeneous 
 nucleation
4Microphysics of Cold Clouds
- Objectives 
- Be able to generally describe the process of 
 homogeneous nucleation
 
- Be able to recall the relationship between 
 homogeneous nucleation, temperature and drop
 size
 
- Be able to generally describe why heterogeneous 
 nucleation occurs at warmer temperatures
5Microphysics of Cold Clouds
- Objectives 
- Be able to describe the four different modes of 
 heterogeneous nucleation
 
- Be able to recall that the temperature of 
 heterogeneous nucleation depends on the mode of
 nucleation
 
- Be able to define ice nuclei
6Microphysics of Cold Clouds
- Objectives 
- Be able to identify the biggest source of ice 
 nuclei
 
- Be able to recall the Fletcher Relationship of 
 ice nuclei size distribution
 
- Be able to explain why concentrations of ice 
 crystals in cloud exceed ice nuclei
 concentrations
 
7Cold Cloud
- Some Part of Cloud Extends Above 0oC
0oC 
 8Mixed Phase Cloud
- Contains Both Liquid Water Drops and Ice Particles
9Glaciated Cloud
- Consists Entirely of Ice Particles
10Supercooled Liquid Water
- Liquid Water That Exists at Temperatures Colder 
 Than 0oC
11Supercooled Liquid Water
- Liquid Water Molecule 
- Hydrogen Bonds
12Supercooled Liquid Water
- Metastable State 
- Want to Freeze
13Fusion
- Ice 
- Water Molecules Arranged in Lattice
Fusion
Liquid Water
Ice 
 14Fusion
- Homogeneous Nucleation 
- Heterogeneous Nucleation 
15Homogeneous Nucleation
- Water Molecules Arrange Themselves into a Lattice
Ice Embryo 
 16Homogeneous Nucleation
- Embryo Grows by Chance Aggregation
Ice Embryo 
 17Homogeneous Nucleation
- Ice Nucleus Is in Constant Flux 
- Molecule Come  Go
Ice Embryo 
 18Homogeneous Nucleation
- Chance Aggregation Increases with Decreasing 
 Temperature
Ice Embryo 
 19Homogeneous Nucleation
- Chance Aggregation Also Depends on Drop Size (or 
 Surface Tension)
Ice Embryo 
 20Homogeneous Nucleation
- Ice Embryo Must Reach Critical Size Before Fusion 
 Occurs Spontaneously
Ice Embryo 
 21Homogeneous Nucleation
- Spontaneous Nucleation Occurs At
5 mm
-39oC 
 22Homogeneous Nucleation
- Spontaneous Nucleation Occurs At
5 mm
40 mm
-36oC
-39oC 
 23Homogeneous Nucleation
- Spontaneous Nucleation Rarely Occurs in the 
 Atmosphere
24Fusion
- Homogeneous Nucleation 
- Heterogeneous Nucleation 
25Heterogeneous Nucleation
- Fusion Is Aided by Foreign Substances Called Ice 
 Nuclei
Ice Nuclei 
 26Heterogeneous Nucleation
- Ice Nuclei Provide a Surface for Liquid Water to 
 Attach
Ice Nuclei 
 27Heterogeneous Nucleation
- Ice Embryo Starts At a Larger Size
Ice Nuclei 
 28Heterogeneous Nucleation
- Fusion Occurs at Much Warmer Temperature
Ice Nuclei
-39oC 
 29Heterogeneous Nucleation Modes
- Condensation Followed by Freezing 
- Contact 
- Immersion 
- Deposition
30Heterogeneous Nucleation Modes
- Condensation Followed by Freezing 
- Ice nuclei acts as CCN, then freezes droplet
31Heterogeneous Nucleation Modes
- Contact 
- Water droplet freezes instantaneously upon 
 contact with ice nuclei
32Heterogeneous Nucleation Modes
- Immersion 
- Causes freezing after becoming embedded within 
 droplet
33Heterogeneous Nucleation Modes
- Deposition 
- Ice forms directly from vapor
34Heterogeneous Nucleation Modes
- One particle may nucleate in different ways
35Heterogeneous Nucleation Modes
- Temperature at which nucleation occurs also 
 depends on mode
36Ice Nuclei
- Any particle that serves as a nucleus leading to 
 the formation of ice crystals without regard to
 the particular physical processes involved in the
 nucleation.
Glossary of Meteorology 
 37Ice Nuclei
- Crystal Structure Similar to Ice 
- Nucleate at warmer temperatures
38Ice Nuclei
- Pure Substances 
- Minerals 
- Organic Material
39Ice Nuclei 
 40Ice Nuclei
- Terrestrial Source Biggest Contributor 
- Ice Nuclei Concentrations Decrease with Altitude 
- More Ice Nuclei in Continental Air
41Ice Nuclei
- Measurement Techniques 
- Cloud Chambers 
- Filter Systems
42Ice Nuclei
- Measurement Problems 
- Do not know mode of activation 
- Contact, Immersion or Condensation Followed by 
 Freezing?
 
- History of Aerosol 
- Trained or Preactivated Ice Nuclei 
- May Not Activate Until Later
43Ice Nuclei
- High Degree of Variablity 
- Order of Magnitude
44Ice Nuclei
- Observed Concentrations (Active) 
45Ice Nuclei
- Fletcher Relationship 
- 1/L _at_ -20oC 
- Decreases by order of magnitude every 4oC
100
10
Concentration (/L)
1
.1
.01
.001
-10
-20
-15
-25
Temperature (oC) 
 46Ice Nuclei
100
10
1
Concentration (/L)
.1
.01
.001
-10
-20
-15
-25
a  .6 N  concentration per liter DT  cha
nge in temperature 
Temperature (oC) 
 47Ice Nuclei
- Typical aerosol concentration about 104 cm-3 
- One in 10 billion (108) aerosols acts as an ice 
 nuclei (at -20oC)
100
10
1
Concentration (/L)
.1
.01
.001
-10
-20
-15
-25
Temperature (oC) 
 48Ice in Cloud
- Observed Concentrations 
- Much Higher Than Ice Nuclei Concentrations
49Ice in Cloud
- Depends Upon 
- Temperature 
- Age of Cloud 
- Type of Cloud
50Ice in Cloud
- Observed Concentrations 
- Increases with Decreasing Temperature
51Ice in Cloud
- Probability of ice crystals
52Ice in Cloud
- Probability of ice crystals increases with age of 
 cloud
 
- Old clouds 
- Glaciated 
- Higher concentrations 
- Young Clouds 
- Water droplets
53Ice in Cloud
- Higher probability of ice crystals in stratus 
 than in cumulus of same cloud top temperature
54Ice in Cloud
- Higher ice crystal concentrations in clouds with 
 broad spectra
55Ice in Cloud
- Discrepancy Between 
- Ice Nuclei Concentration 
- Observed Ice Crystal Concentration
56Ice in Cloud
- Primary Method 
- Heterogeneous Nucleation
57Ice in Cloud
- Seconday Method 
- Ice Multiplication Process 
- Fracture of Ice Crystals 
- Splintering of Freezing Drops
58Ice Multiplication Process
  59Ice Multiplication Process
- Splintering of Freezing Drops