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Evaporative sodium salt crust development and its wind tunnel derived transport dynamics under variable climatic conditions

Abstract:
Playas (or ephemeral lakes) canbe significant sources of dust,but they are typically covered by salt crusts of variable mineralogy and these introduce uncertainty into dust emission predictions. Despite the importance of crust mineralogy to emission potential, little is known about (i) the effect of short-term changes in temperature and relative humidity on the erodibility of these crusts, and (ii) the influence of crust degradation and mineralogy on wind speedthreshold for dust emission. Our understanding of systems where emission is not driven by impacts from saltators is particularly poor. This paper describes a wind tunnel study in which dust emission in the absence of saltating particles was measured for a suite of climatic conditions and salt crust types commonly found on Sua Pan, Botswana. The crusts were found to be non-emissive under climate conditions characteristic of dawn and early morning, as compared to hot and dry daytime conditions when the wind speed threshold for dust emission appears to be highly variable, depending upon salt crust physicochemistry. Significantly, sodium sulphate rich crusts were found to be more emissive than crusts formed from sodium chloride, while degraded versions of both crusts had a lower emission threshold than fresh, continuous crusts. The results from this study are in agreement with in-situ field measurements and confirm that dust emission from salt crusted surfaces can occur without saltation, although the vertical fluxes are orders of magnitudelower (~ 10 μg/m/s^1) than for aeolian systems where entrainment is driven by particle impact.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1016/j.aeolia.2016.09.003

Authors


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Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
SSD
Department:
SOGE
Sub department:
Geography
Role:
Author


Publisher:
Elsevier
Journal:
Aeolian Research More from this journal
Volume:
23
Pages:
51-62
Publication date:
2016-10-01
Acceptance date:
2016-09-27
DOI:


Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:647889
UUID:
uuid:a6602512-1512-49c9-9894-c4aef9006ce3
Local pid:
pubs:647889
Source identifiers:
647889
Deposit date:
2016-10-04

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