Missing Link to Cloud Formation Found
10 August 2009
New chemical research shows how cloud seedlings form over
forested areas.
The discovery of an unknown hitherto chemical compound in
the atmosphere may help to explain how and when clouds are
formed. The discovery of the so called dihydroxyepoxides (an
aerosol-precursor), is reported in this week's issue of
Science by a team comprising of researchers from the
California Institute of Technology (Caltech) and the
University of Copenhagen (UoC).
Professor Henrik Kjærgaard from the
Department of Chemistry at the UoC calls the new
compounds a missing link in the formation of clouds.
- "We know that aerosols are important in the formation
of clouds but, we didn't know much about how the aerosols
themselves were formed. This new compound may be just what
we were looking for," says the professor who has recently
moved from University of Otago, New Zealand to fill his new
appointment in Copenhagen. The new compound was originally
found when a team of researchers from Caltech mounted a
measuring device known as a Chemical Ionization Mass
Spectrometer (CIMS) on an aeroplane, and flew it over the
oaken forests of Northern America.
Maple Clouds
Next to methane, deciduous plants and trees such as oak
and maple, are known to be the largest source of
hydrocarbons in the atmosphere; an important factor in
climate-change. As a result, the researchers went into the
lab to calculate what occurs to the tree-released
hydrocarbon known as isoprene, when it meets other compounds
in the atmosphere. Based on previous research, isoprene was
expected to break down into smaller molecules. But previous
research was done with air found over cities, where levels
of the combustion by-product NOx are very high. And the
chemicals formed when isoprene interacts with NOx do not
easily form aerosols. However, when subjected to air as
found over pristine stretches of forest, the fate of the
tree-released hydrocarbons turned out to be a very different
one. Without the NOx to skew the process, isoprene
unexpectedly degraded into the new compound:
dihydroxyepoxide. This new compound appears to be extremely
reactive and likely to form aerosols.
Clouds: Central to Climate Studies
The study detailed in this week's issue of Science,
reports the laboratory measurement of the isoprene
degradation by hydroxyl radicals "the vacuum cleaner of the
atmosphere". The detection of these epoxides as a
significant final product in the isoprene breakdown was
supported by isotope and theoretical studies, and
corroborated the field measurements. The theoretical studies
from Kjaergaar's group at the University of Otago, improved
the CIMS technique and supported the chemical degradation
mechanisms proposed. Discovering a new and unexpected
atmospheric compound in the air over forests is fundamental
research. Nevertheless, with manmade climate-change looming
on the horizon, the research might find applications sooner
that expected. The new aerosol-precursor may be extremely
important when researchers attempt to compute projected
climate change.
- "That means, that the new compound is a missing link in
more that one sense", Professor Kjærgaard states. "Clouds
can retain as well as block the heat of the sun, so, if we
don't understand what drives the formation of clouds, our
climate-models are bound to be less than exact".
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