Structure and water attachment rates of ice in the atmosphere: role of nitrogen
Pablo Llombart, Ram\'on M. Bergua, Eva G. Noya, Luis G. MacDowell

TL;DR
This study uses computer simulations to investigate how nitrogen affects ice crystal growth and surface properties in the atmosphere, revealing that nitrogen primarily influences growth rates through diffusion effects rather than surface disruption.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that nitrogen does not significantly alter the ice surface structure but slows growth rates via diffusion limitations, clarifying previous controversies.
Findings
Nitrogen adsorption on ice is minimal at atmospheric pressures.
Surface premelting layer thickness remains unchanged with nitrogen presence.
Nitrogen impacts growth rates through collision-induced diffusion effects, not surface disruption.
Abstract
In this work we perform computer simulations of the ice surface in order to elucidate the role of nitrogen in the crystal growth rates and crystal habits of snow in the atmosphere. In pure water vapor at temperatures typical of ice crystal formation in cirrus clouds, we find that basal and primary prismatic facets exhibit a layer of premelted ice, with thickness in the subnanometer range. For partial pressures of 1 bar, well above the expected values in the troposphere, we find that only small amounts of nitrogen are adsorbed. The adsorption takes place onto the premelted surface, and hardly any nitrogen dissolves within the premelting film. The premelting film thickness does not change either. We quantify the resulting change of the ice/vapor surface tension to be in the hundredth of mN/m and find that the structure of the pristine ice surface is not changed in a significant manner. We…
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