Salinity and SO4 and Br enrichment of seawater and frost flowers near Barrow, Alaska


Autoria(s): Alvarez-Aviles, Laura; Simpson, William R; Douglas, Thomas A; Sturm, Matthew; Perovich, Donald K; Domine, Florent
Cobertura

LATITUDE: 71.430000 * LONGITUDE: -156.470000

Data(s)

05/02/2008

Resumo

Frost flowers have been proposed to be the major source of sea-salt aerosol to the atmosphere during polar winter and a source of reactive bromine during polar springtime. However little is known about their bulk chemical composition or microstructure, two important factors that may affect their ability to produce aerosols and provide chemically reactive surfaces for exchange with the atmosphere. Therefore, we chemically analyzed 28 samples of frost flowers and parts of frost flowers collected from sea ice off of northern Alaska. Our results support the proposed mechanism for frost flower growth that suggests water vapor deposition forms an ice skeleton that wicks brine present on newly grown sea ice. We measured a high variability in sulfate enrichment factors (with respect to chloride) in frost flowers and seawater from the vicinity of freezing sea ice. The variability in sulfate indicates that mirabilite precipitation (Na2SO4 x 10 H2O) occurs during frost flower growth. Brine wicked up by frost flowers is typically sulfate depleted, in agreement with the theory that frost flowers are related to sulfate-depleted aerosol observed in Antarctica. The bromide enrichment factors we measured in frost flowers are within error of seawater composition, constraining the direct reactive losses of bromide from frost flowers. We combined the chemical composition measurements with temperature observations to create a conceptual model of possible scenarios for frost flower microstructure development.

Formato

application/zip, 2 datasets

Identificador

https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.806702

doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.806702

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

PANGAEA

Direitos

CC-BY: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported

Access constraints: unrestricted

Fonte

Supplement to: Alvarez-Aviles, Laura; Simpson, William R; Douglas, Thomas A; Sturm, Matthew; Perovich, Donald K; Domine, Florent (2008): Frost flower chemical composition during growth and its implications for aerosol production and bromine activation. Journal of Geophysical Research-Atmospheres, 113(D21), D21304, doi:10.1029/2008JD010277

Palavras-Chave #Area; Area/locality; Barrow_coast; Barrow, Alaska, USA; bromine; Date; EF; EF std dev; Enrichment factor; Enrichment factor, standard deviation; in per mil; International Polar Year (2007-2008); IPY; N; per mil; Sal; Salinity; Salinity, standard deviation; Sal std dev; Sample amount; Sample ID; Sample type; Samp type; SNOW; Snow/ice sample; sulphate
Tipo

Dataset