Manjula I. Nandasiri
Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory
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Publication
Featured researches published by Manjula I. Nandasiri.
Geophysical Research Letters | 2016
Gourihar Kulkarni; Swarup China; Shang Liu; Manjula I. Nandasiri; Noopur Sharma; Jacqueline Wilson; A. C. Aiken; Duli Chand; Alexander Laskin; Claudio Mazzoleni; Mikhail S. Pekour; John E. Shilling; V. Shutthanandan; Alla Zelenyuk; Rahul A. Zaveri
Ice formation by diesel soot particles was investigated at temperatures ranging from −40 to −50°C. Size-selected soot particles were physically and chemically aged in an environmental chamber, and their ice nucleating properties were determined using a continuous flow diffusion type ice nucleation chamber. Bare (freshly formed), hydrated, and compacted soot particles, as well as α-pinene secondary organic aerosol (SOA)-coated soot particles at high relative humidity conditions, showed ice formation activity at subsaturation conditions with respect to water but below the homogeneous freezing threshold conditions. However, SOA-coated soot particles at dry conditions were observed to freeze at homogeneous freezing threshold conditions. Overall, our results suggest that heterogeneous ice nucleation activity of freshly emitted diesel soot particles are sensitive to some of the aging processes that soot can undergo in the atmosphere.
Geophysical Research Letters | 2016
Gourihar Kulkarni; Swarup China; Shang Liu; Manjula I. Nandasiri; Noopur Sharma; Jacqueline Wilson; A. C. Aiken; Duli Chand; Alexander Laskin; Claudio Mazzoleni; Mikhail S. Pekour; John E. Shilling; V. Shutthanandan; Alla Zelenyuk; Rahul A. Zaveri
Ice formation by diesel soot particles was investigated at temperatures ranging from −40 to −50°C. Size-selected soot particles were physically and chemically aged in an environmental chamber, and their ice nucleating properties were determined using a continuous flow diffusion type ice nucleation chamber. Bare (freshly formed), hydrated, and compacted soot particles, as well as α-pinene secondary organic aerosol (SOA)-coated soot particles at high relative humidity conditions, showed ice formation activity at subsaturation conditions with respect to water but below the homogeneous freezing threshold conditions. However, SOA-coated soot particles at dry conditions were observed to freeze at homogeneous freezing threshold conditions. Overall, our results suggest that heterogeneous ice nucleation activity of freshly emitted diesel soot particles are sensitive to some of the aging processes that soot can undergo in the atmosphere.
Geophysical Research Letters | 2015
Gourihar Kulkarni; Manjula I. Nandasiri; Alla Zelenyuk; Josef Beranek; Nitesh Madaan; Arun Devaraj; V. Shutthanandan; Suntharampillai Thevuthasan; Tamas Varga
Specific chemical and physical properties of volcanic ash particles that could affect their ability to induce ice formation are poorly understood. In this study, the ice nucleating properties of size-selected volcanic ash and mineral dust particles in relation to their surface chemistry and crystalline structure at temperatures ranging from –30 to –38 °C were investigated in deposition mode. Ice nucleation efficiency of dust particles was higher compared to ash particles at all temperature and relative humidity conditions. Particle characterization analysis shows that surface elemental composition of ash and dust particles was similar; however, the structural properties of ash samples were different.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2015
Gourihar Kulkarni; Kai Zhang; Chun Zhao; Manjula I. Nandasiri; V. Shutthanandan; Xiaohong Liu; Jerome D. Fast; Larry K. Berg
Changes in the ice nucleation characteristics of atmospherically relevant mineral dust particles caused by a coating of nitric acid are not well understood. Further, the atmospheric implications of dust coatings on ice-cloud properties under different assumptions of primary ice nucleation mechanisms are unknown. We investigated the ice nucleation ability of Arizona Test Dust, illite, K-feldspar, and quartz as a function of temperature (−25°C to −30°C) and relative humidity with respect to water (75% to 110%). The particles (bare or nitric acid coated) were size selected at 250 nm, and the fraction of particles nucleating ice at various temperature and saturation conditions was determined. All of the dust species nucleated ice at subsaturated conditions, although the coated particles (except quartz) showed a reduction in their ice nucleation ability relative to bare particles. However, at supersaturated conditions, bare and coated particles had nearly equivalent ice nucleation characteristics. The results of a single-column model showed that simulated ice crystal number concentrations are mostly dependent upon the coated particle fraction, primary ice nucleation mechanisms, and competition among ice nucleation mechanisms to nucleate ice. In general, coatings were observed to modify ice-cloud properties, and the complexity of ice-cloud and mixed-phase-cloud evolution when different primary ice nucleation mechanisms compete for fixed water vapor budgets was supported.
Coordination Chemistry Reviews | 2016
Manjula I. Nandasiri; Sachin R. Jambovane; B. Peter McGrail; Herbert T. Schaef; Satish K. Nune
Acta Materialia | 2013
Wen Tong; Hao Yang; Peter Moeck; Manjula I. Nandasiri; Nigel D. Browning
Advanced Materials Interfaces | 2017
Souvik De; Manjula I. Nandasiri; Herbert T. Schaef; B.P. McGrail; Satish K. Nune; Jodie L. Lutkenhaus
Journal of Nuclear Materials | 2015
Remeredzai J. Kuhudzai; J.B. Malherbe; Thulani Thokozani Hlatshwayo; N.G. van der Berg; Arun Devaraj; Zihua Zhu; Manjula I. Nandasiri
Advanced Materials Interfaces | 2017
Souvik De; Manjula I. Nandasiri; Herbert T. Schaef; B.P. McGrail; Satish K. Nune; Jodie L. Lutkenhaus
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2015
Gourihar Kulkarni; Kai Zhang; Chun Zhao; Manjula I. Nandasiri; V. Shutthanandan; Xiaohong Liu; Jerome D. Fast; Larry K. Berg