论文标题
冰的结构和水附着速率:氮的作用
Structure and water attachment rates of ice in the atmosphere: role of nitrogen
论文作者
论文摘要
在这项工作中,我们对冰表面进行计算机模拟,以阐明氮在大气中降雪的晶体生长速率和晶体习惯中的作用。在苏里尔云中典型的冰晶形成温度下的纯水蒸气中,我们发现基础和主要的棱镜面均显示出一层预冰的冰层,厚度为厚度。对于1 Bar的部分压力,远高于对流层的预期值,我们发现只有少量的氮被吸附。吸附发生在预列表的表面上,几乎没有任何氮溶解在预上膜中。薄膜的厚度也不会改变。我们量化了冰/蒸气表面张力的产生变化为Mn/m的百分之一,发现原始冰表面的结构不会以显着的方式改变。我们对碰撞水分子进行轨迹分析,发现直接弹道碰撞的附着速率与氮压无关。但是,氮的密度足以使比平均自由路径较小的距离的轨迹偏转。我们的结果明确表明,在纯水蒸气和受控氮气中测得的生长速率的报告差异与由于氮的吸附而引起的冰面的显着破坏无关。相反,我们从轨迹分析中清楚地表明,由于水分子与块状氮气之间的碰撞,氮降低了晶体生长速率。这阐明了惰性气体对晶体生长速率的作用的长期争议,并证明它们的影响完全与整个气相的水蒸气的扩散限制流动有关。
In this work we perform computer simulations of the ice surface in order to elucidate the role of nitrogen in the crystal growth rates and crystal habits of snow in the atmosphere. In pure water vapor at temperatures typical of ice crystal formation in cirrus clouds, we find that basal and primary prismatic facets exhibit a layer of premelted ice, with thickness in the subnanometer range. For partial pressures of 1 bar, well above the expected values in the troposphere, we find that only small amounts of nitrogen are adsorbed. The adsorption takes place onto the premelted surface, and hardly any nitrogen dissolves within the premelting film. The premelting film thickness does not change either. We quantify the resulting change of the ice/vapor surface tension to be in the hundredth of mN/m and find that the structure of the pristine ice surface is not changed in a significant manner. We perform a trajectory analysis of colliding water molecules, and find that the attachment rates from direct ballistic collision are very close to unity irrespective of the nitrogen pressure. Nitrogen is however at sufficient density to deflect a fraction of trajectories with smaller distance than the mean free path. Our results show explicitly that the reported differences in growth rates measured in pure water vapor and a controlled nitrogen atmosphere are not related to a significant disruption of the ice surface due to nitrogen adsorption. On the contrary, we show clearly from our trajectory analysis that nitrogen slows down the crystal growth rates due to collisions between water molecules with bulk nitrogen gas. This clarifies the long standing controversy of the role of inert gases on crystal growth rates and demonstrates their influence is solely related to the diffusion limited flow of water vapor across the gas phase.