Development and characterization of a high-efficiency, aircraft-based axial cyclone cloud water collector
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Published:2018-09-05
Issue:9
Volume:11
Page:5025-5048
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ISSN:1867-8548
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Container-title:Atmospheric Measurement Techniques
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Meas. Tech.
Author:
Crosbie Ewan, Brown Matthew D.ORCID, Shook Michael, Ziemba Luke, Moore Richard H.ORCID, Shingler Taylor, Winstead Edward, Thornhill K. Lee, Robinson Claire, MacDonald Alexander B., Dadashazar HosseinORCID, Sorooshian ArminORCID, Beyersdorf AndreasORCID, Eugene Alexis, Collett Jr. JeffreyORCID, Straub Derek, Anderson Bruce
Abstract
Abstract. A new aircraft-mounted probe for collecting
samples of cloud water has been designed, fabricated, and extensively tested.
Following previous designs, the probe uses inertial separation to remove
cloud droplets from the airstream, which are subsequently collected and
stored for offline analysis. We report details of the design, operation, and
modelled and measured probe performance. Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) was used to understand the flow patterns
around the complex interior geometrical features that were optimized to
ensure efficient droplet capture. CFD simulations coupled with particle
tracking and multiphase surface transport modelling provide detailed
estimates of the probe performance across the entire range of flight
operating conditions and sampling scenarios. Physical operation of the probe was tested on a Lockheed C-130 Hercules
(fuselage mounted) and de Havilland Twin Otter (wing pylon mounted) during
three airborne field campaigns. During C-130 flights on the final field
campaign, the probe reflected the most developed version of the design and a
median cloud water collection rate of 4.5 mL min−1 was achieved. This
allowed samples to be collected over 1–2 min under optimal cloud
conditions. Flights on the Twin Otter featured an inter-comparison of the
new probe with a slotted-rod collector, which has an extensive airborne
campaign legacy. Comparison of trace species concentrations showed good
agreement between collection techniques, with absolute concentrations of
most major ions agreeing within 30 %, over a range of several orders of
magnitude.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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