Frost flowers growing in the Arctic ocean-atmosphere-sea ice-snow interface: 1. Chemical composition
Frost flowers, intricate featherlike crystals that grow on refreezing sea ice leads, have been implicated in lower atmospheric chemical reactions. Few studies have presented chemical composition information for frost flowers over time and many of the chemical species commonly associated with Polar t...
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Published in | Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres Vol. 117; no. D14 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
27.07.2012
American Geophysical Union |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Frost flowers, intricate featherlike crystals that grow on refreezing sea ice leads, have been implicated in lower atmospheric chemical reactions. Few studies have presented chemical composition information for frost flowers over time and many of the chemical species commonly associated with Polar tropospheric reactions have never been reported for frost flowers. We undertook this study on the sea ice north of Barrow, Alaska to quantify the major ion, stable oxygen and hydrogen isotope, alkalinity, light absorbance by soluble species, organochlorine, and aldehyde composition of seawater, brine, and frost flowers. For many of these chemical species we present the first measurements from brine or frost flowers. Results show that major ion and alkalinity concentrations, stable isotope values, and major chromophore (NO3− and H2O2) concentrations are controlled by fractionation from seawater and brine. The presence of these chemical species in present and future sea ice scenarios is somewhat predictable. However, aldehydes, organochlorine compounds, light absorbing species, and mercury (part 2 of this research and Sherman et al. (2012)) are deposited to frost flowers through less predictable processes that probably involve the atmosphere as a source. The present and future concentrations of these constituents in frost flowers may not be easily incorporated into future sea ice or lower atmospheric chemistry scenarios. Thinning of Arctic sea ice will likely present more open sea ice leads where young ice, brine, and frost flowers form. How these changing ice conditions will affect the interactions between ice, brine, frost flowers and the lower atmosphere is unknown.
Key Points
Brine and frost flowers on sea ice have interactions with the lower atmosphere
Frost flowers have some predictable and some unpredictable chemical composition
Changing sea ice regimes likely mean more brine and frost flowers in the future |
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Bibliography: | ArticleID:2011JD016460 istex:4BA967A5C932EEC0AFE20E0FEDDD4E33BC41A150 ark:/67375/WNG-BD89K0NZ-W Tab-delimited Table 1.Tab-delimited Table 2.Tab-delimited Table 3.Tab-delimited Table 4.Tab-delimited Table 5. This is a companion to DOI 10.1029/2011JD016186 ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 23 |
ISSN: | 0148-0227 2169-897X 2156-2202 2169-8996 |
DOI: | 10.1029/2011JD016460 |