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An investigation of the role of sedimentation for stratospheric solar radiation management
Author(s) -
Benduhn F.,
Lawrence M. G.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-8996
pISSN - 2169-897X
DOI - 10.1002/jgrd.50622
Subject(s) - aerosol , sedimentation , context (archaeology) , stratosphere , settling , atmospheric sciences , environmental science , meteorology , geology , physics , sediment , geomorphology , environmental engineering , paleontology
Gravitational settling has been considered to be one of the limiting factors to stratospheric aerosol lifetime and therefore to the practicability and effectiveness of stratospheric solar radiation management (S‐SRM, which is one of the approaches being considered for planetary‐scale geoengineering or climate engineering ). Given the property of numerical diffusion that is associated with sedimentation as a transport process on a discretized global grid, it is important to represent this process as accurately as possible. In this paper, newly developed sedimentation schemes are presented and validated against an analytical solution. Sensitivity studies with an aerosol chemistry general circulation model are conducted with monodisperse aerosol particles of fixed size and follow two main aims: first, to evaluate the relevance of sedimentation for the aerosol lifetime and distribution in the stratosphere as a function of particle size, and second, to explore the influence of numerical diffusion on these patterns. The relevance of sedimentation is explored further with respect to other relevant particle properties, such as shape and density. It is shown that the role of sedimentation in determining stratospheric particle lifetime is a complex function of all particle properties combined. Especially with respect to sulfate aerosol, the influence of sedimentation is conditioned by the temporal evolution of particle size. Although large enough particles for considerable sedimentation mediated removal are observed in the context of volcanic eruptions, it seems uncertain whether secondary particles of an equivalent size would be obtained in the context of S‐SRM, pointing to the need for an accurate representation of aerosol growth dynamics.

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