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Creators/Authors contains: "Brubaker, Thomas"

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  1. Ice-nucleating particles (INPs) in biomass-burning aerosol (BBA) that affect cloud glaciation, microphysics, precipitation, and radiative forcing were recently found to be driven by the production of mineral phases. BBA experiences extensive chemical aging as the smoke plume dilutes, and we explored how this alters the ice activity of the smoke using simulated atmospheric aging of authentic BBA in a chamber reactor. Unexpectedly, atmospheric aging enhanced the ice activity for most types of fuels and aging schemes. The removal of organic carbon particle coatings that conceal the mineral-based ice-active sites by evaporation or oxidation then dissolution can increase the ice activity by greater than an order of magnitude. This represents a different framework for the evolution of INPs from biomass burning where BBA becomes more ice active as it dilutes and ages, making a larger contribution to the INP budget, resulting cloud microphysics, and climate forcing than is currently considered. 
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  2. Abstract. Droplet freezing techniques (DFTs) have been used for half a century tomeasure the concentration of ice-nucleating particles (INPs) in the atmosphereand determine their freezing properties to understand the effects of INPs onmixed-phase clouds. The ice nucleation community has recently adopted dropletfreezing assays as a commonplace experimental approach. These dropletfreezing experiments are often limited by contamination that causesnonhomogeneous freezing of the “pure” water used to generate the dropletsin the heterogeneous freezing temperature regime that is being measured.Interference from the early freezing of water is often overlooked and notfully reported, or measurements are restricted to analyzing the moreice-active INPs that freeze well above the temperature of the backgroundwater. However, this avoidance is not viable for analyzing the freezingbehavior of less active INPs in the atmosphere that still have potentiallyimportant effects on cold-cloud microphysics. In this work we review a numberof recent droplet freezing techniques that show great promise in reducing theseinterferences, and we report our own extensive series of measurements usingsimilar methodologies. By characterizing the performance of differentsubstrates on which the droplets are placed and of different pure watergeneration techniques, we recommend best practices to reduce theseinterferences. We tested different substrates, water sources, dropletmatrixes, and droplet sizes to provide deeper insight into what methodologiesare best suited for DFTs. Approaches for analyzing droplet freezingtemperature spectra and accounting and correcting for the background “pure”water control spectrum are also presented. Finally, we propose experimentaland data analysis procedures for future homogeneous and heterogeneous icenucleation studies to promote a more uniform and reliable methodology thatfacilitates the ready intercomparison of ice-nucleating particles measured byDFTs. 
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