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Modeling Dust Mineralogical Composition: Sensitivity to Soil Mineralogy Atlases and Their Expected Climate Impacts Soil dust aerosols are a key component of the climate system, as they interact with short- and long-wave radiation, alter cloud formation processes, affect atmospheric chemistry and play a role in biogeochemical cycles by providing nutrient inputs such as iron and phosphorus. The influence of dust on these processes depends on its physicochemical properties, which, far from being homogeneous, are shaped by its regionally varying mineral composition. The relative amount of minerals in dust depends on the source region and shows a large geographical variability. However, many state-of-the-art Earth system models (ESMs), upon which climate analyses and projections rely, still consider dust mineralogy to be invariant. The explicit representation of minerals in ESMs is more hindered by our limited knowledge of the global soil composition along with the resulting size-resolved airborne mineralogy than by computational constraints. In this work we introduce an explicit mineralogy representation within the state-of-the-art Multiscale Online Nonhydrostatic AtmospheRe CHemistry (MONARCH) model. We review and compare two existing soil mineralogy datasets, which remain a source of uncertainty for dust mineralogy modeling and provide an evaluation of multiannual simulations against available mineralogy observations. Soil mineralogy datasets are based on measurements performed after wet sieving, which breaks the aggregates found in the parent soil. Our model predicts the emitted particle size distribution (PSD) in terms of its constituent minerals based on brittle fragmentation theory (BFT), which reconstructs the emitted mineral aggregates destroyed by wet sieving. Our simulations broadly reproduce the most abundant mineral fractions independently of the soil composition data used. Feldspars and calcite are highly sensitive to the soil mineralogy map, mainly due to the different assumptions made in each soil dataset to extrapolate a handful of soil measurements to arid and semi-arid regions worldwide. For the least abundant or more difficult-to-determine minerals, such as iron oxides, uncertainties in soil mineralogy yield differences in annual mean aerosol mass fractions of up to ∼ 100 %. Although BFT restores coarse aggregates including phyllosilicates that usually break during soil analysis, we still identify an overestimation of coarse quartz mass fractions (above 2 µm in diameter). In a dedicated experiment, we estimate the fraction of dust with undetermined composition as given by a soil map, which makes up ∼ 10 % of the emitted dust mass at the global scale and can be regionally larger. Changes in the underlying soil mineralogy impact our estimates of climate-relevant variables, particularly affecting the regional variability of the single-scattering albedo at solar wavelengths or the total iron deposited over oceans. All in all, this assessment represents a baseline for future model experiments including new mineralogical maps constrained by high-quality spaceborne hyperspectral measurements, such as those arising from the NASA Earth Surface Mineral Dust Source Investigation (EMIT) mission.
Document ID
20230011573
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
María Gonçalves Ageitos ORCID
(Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya Barcelona, Spain)
Vincenzo Obiso
(Barcelona Supercomputing Center Barcelona, Spain)
Ron L. Miller ORCID
(Goddard Institute for Space Studies New York, New York, United States)
Oriol Jorba ORCID
(Barcelona Supercomputing Center Barcelona, Spain)
Martina Klose ORCID
(Barcelona Supercomputing Center Barcelona, Spain)
Matt Dawson
(Barcelona Supercomputing Center Barcelona, Spain)
Yves Balkanski ORCID
(Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de l'Environnement Gif-sur-Yvette, France)
Jan Perlwitz ORCID
(Goddard Institute for Space Studies New York, New York, United States)
Sara Basart ORCID
(Barcelona Supercomputing Center Barcelona, Spain)
Enza Di Tomaso
(Barcelona Supercomputing Center Barcelona, Spain)
Jerónimo Escribano ORCID
(Barcelona Supercomputing Center Barcelona, Spain)
Francesca Macchia ORCID
(Barcelona Supercomputing Center Barcelona, Spain)
Gilbert Montané
(Barcelona Supercomputing Center Barcelona, Spain)
Natalie M. Mahowald ORCID
(Cornell University Ithaca, New York, United States)
Robert O. Green
(Jet Propulsion Lab La Cañada Flintridge, California, United States)
David R. Thompson ORCID
(Jet Propulsion Lab La Cañada Flintridge, California, United States)
Carlos Pérez García‐Pando ORCID
(Barcelona Supercomputing Center Barcelona, Spain)
Date Acquired
August 4, 2023
Publication Date
August 4, 2023
Publication Information
Publication: Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Publisher: European Geosciences Union
Volume: 23
Issue: 15
Issue Publication Date: August 1, 2023
ISSN: 1680-7316
e-ISSN: 1680-7324
Subject Category
Meteorology and Climatology
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 509496.02.80.01.15
CONTRACT_GRANT: 80HQTR21CA005
CONTRACT_GRANT: 80NSSC19K0984
CONTRACT_GRANT: J-090007
CONTRACT_GRANT: 80NM0018D0004P00002
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNG14HH42I
CONTRACT_GRANT: 80NM0018D0004TS14
CONTRACT_GRANT: 80NSSC19K0056
PROJECT: US DOE DE-SC0021302
CONTRACT_GRANT: CGL2017-88911-R
CONTRACT_GRANT: ESA AO/1-10546/20/I-NB
CONTRACT_GRANT: VH-NG-1533
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Use by or on behalf of the US Gov. Permitted.
Technical Review
External Peer Committee
Keywords
Soil dust
dust aerosols
mineral composition
aerosol sizes
MONARCH
atmosphere chemistry model
emitted particle size distribution
Brittle Fragmentation Theory
soil composition data
Feldspars
calcite
quartz
minerology
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