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Effect of Turbulence on Collisional Growth of Cloud Droplets

Li, X. Y. (author)
Brandenburg, A. (author)
Svensson, G. (author)
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Haugen, N. E. L. (author)
Mehlig, B. (author)
Rogachevskii, Igor (author)
Gothenburg University,Göteborgs universitet,Gillbergcentrum,Gillberg Neuropsychiatry Centre
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 (creator_code:org_t)
American Meteorological Society, 2018
2018
English.
In: Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences. - : American Meteorological Society. - 0022-4928 .- 1520-0469. ; 75:10, s. 3469-3487
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)
Abstract Subject headings
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  • Weinvestigate the effect of turbulence on the collisional growth of micrometer-sized droplets through highresolution numerical simulations with well-resolved Kolmogorov scales, assuming a collision and coalescence efficiency of unity. The droplet dynamics and collisions are approximated using a superparticle approach. In the absence of gravity, we show that the time evolution of the shape of the droplet-size distribution due to turbulence-induced collisions depends strongly on the turbulent energy-dissipation rate <<, but only weakly on the Reynolds number. This can be explained through the << dependence of the mean collision rate described by the Saffman-Turner collision model. Consistent with the Saffman-Turner collision model and its extensions, the collision rate increases as << 1/ 2 even when coalescence is invoked. The size distribution exhibits power-law behavior with a slope of 23.7 from a maximum at approximately 10 up to about 40 mm. When gravity is invoked, turbulence is found to dominate the time evolution of an initially monodisperse droplet distribution at early times. At later times, however, gravity takes over and dominates the collisional growth. We find that the formation of large droplets is very sensitive to the turbulent energy dissipation rate. This is because turbulence enhances the collisional growth between similar-sized droplets at the early stage of raindrop formation. The mean collision rate grows exponentially, which is consistent with the theoretical prediction of the continuous collisional growth even when turbulence-generated collisions are invoked. This consistency only reflects the mean effect of turbulence on collisional growth.

Subject headings

NATURVETENSKAP  -- Geovetenskap och miljövetenskap -- Meteorologi och atmosfärforskning (hsv//swe)
NATURAL SCIENCES  -- Earth and Related Environmental Sciences -- Meteorology and Atmospheric Sciences (hsv//eng)

Keyword

Turbulence
Clouds
direct numerical simulations
inertial particles
aerosol-particles
heavy-particles
preferential concentration
clustering instability
isotropic turbulence
size distributions
rain initiation
drops
Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
ates of america
v112
p9536
ates of america
v113
p14243

Publication and Content Type

ref (subject category)
art (subject category)

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