Impacts of Aerosol Shortwave Radiation Absorption on the Dynamics of an Idealized Convective Atmospheric Boundary Layer

E. Barbaro*, J. Vila-Guerau de Arellano, M. C. Krol, A. A. M. Holtslag

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

We investigated the impact of aerosol heat absorption on convective atmospheric boundary-layer (CBL) dynamics. Numerical experiments using a large-eddy simulation model enabled us to study the changes in the structure of a dry and shearless CBL in depth-equilibrium for different vertical profiles of aerosol heating rates. Our results indicated that aerosol heat absorption decreased the depth of the CBL due to a combination of factors: (i) surface shadowing, reducing the sensible heat flux at the surface and, (ii) the development of a deeper inversion layer, stabilizing the upper CBL depending on the vertical aerosol distribution. Steady-state analytical solutions for CBL depth and potential temperature jump, derived using zero-order mixed-layer theory, agreed well with the large-eddy simulations. An analysis of the entrainment zone heat budget showed that, although the entrainment flux was controlled by the reduction in surface flux, the entrainment zone became deeper and less stably stratified. Therefore, the vertical profile of the aerosol heating rate promoted changes in both the structure and evolution of the CBL. More specifically, when absorbing aerosols were present only at the top of the CBL, we found that stratification at lower levels was the mechanism responsible for a reduction in the vertical velocity and a steeper decay of the turbulent kinetic energy throughout the CBL. The increase in the depth of the inversion layer also modified the potential temperature variance. When aerosols were present we observed that the potential temperature variance became significant already around (where is the CBL height) but less intense at the entrainment zone due to the smoother potential temperature vertical gradient.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)31-49
Number of pages19
JournalBoundary-Layer Meteorology
Volume148
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2013

Funding

The authors gratefully thank Sasha Madronich of NCAR for his very useful discussion of the radiative transfer results. The research was supported by the NWO grant on computer time (SH-060-12).

Keywords

  • Aerosol heat absorption
  • Boundary-layer vertical structure
  • Large-eddy simulation
  • Surface heat flux
  • ACTINIC FLUX
  • ENERGY-BUDGET
  • HEATING RATES
  • CLOSURE-MODEL
  • TURBULENCE
  • ENTRAINMENT
  • SIMULATION
  • PHOTOLYSIS
  • CLIMATE
  • SURFACE

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