Award Abstract # 0425395
Collaborative Research: Laboratory Investigations of Heat and Gas Transfer at an Air-Water Interface

NSF Org: OCE
Division Of Ocean Sciences
Recipient: THE TRUSTEES OF COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY IN THE CITY OF NEW YORK
Initial Amendment Date: August 26, 2004
Latest Amendment Date: August 26, 2004
Award Number: 0425395
Award Instrument: Standard Grant
Program Manager: Eric C. Itsweire
OCE
 Division Of Ocean Sciences
GEO
 Directorate for Geosciences
Start Date: October 1, 2004
End Date: September 30, 2008 (Estimated)
Total Intended Award Amount: $81,718.00
Total Awarded Amount to Date: $81,718.00
Funds Obligated to Date: FY 2004 = $81,718.00
History of Investigator:
  • Christopher Zappa (Principal Investigator)
    zappa@ldeo.columbia.edu
Recipient Sponsored Research Office: Columbia University
615 W 131ST ST
NEW YORK
NY  US  10027-7922
(212)854-6851
Sponsor Congressional District: 13
Primary Place of Performance: Columbia University Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory
Rt 9W
Palisades
NY  US  10964
Primary Place of Performance
Congressional District:
17
Unique Entity Identifier (UEI): F4N1QNPB95M4
Parent UEI:
NSF Program(s): BE: NON-ANNOUNCEMENT RESEARCH,
Chemical Oceanography
Primary Program Source: app-0104 
Program Reference Code(s): 0000, OTHR
Program Element Code(s): 162900, 167000
Award Agency Code: 4900
Fund Agency Code: 4900
Assistance Listing Number(s): 47.050

ABSTRACT

0425305/0425395

Intellectual Merit
This project will produce an important advancement in knowledge and understanding within the air-sea interaction community and more broadly in the area of air-water fluxes. Modern instrumental techniques such as infrared imaging, digital particle image velocimetry, laser-induced fluorescence, bulk gas flux, and air-side heat and momentum flux measurement methods will be combined to perform a detailed study of the hydrodynamics of air-water heat fluxes in a specially constructed controlled-turbulence wind flume tank at the University of Washington.

The objectives of the proposed research are to:
1. Conduct a detailed, controlled study of the hydrodynamics governing air-water heat and gas fluxes and to evaluate the effectiveness of active and passive infrared techniques to infer heat and gas transfer velocities.
2. Determine if heat can be used as a proxy tracer for air-water gas transfer.
3. Determine if surface penetration theory provides a more accurate conceptual model of air-water heat and gas transfer than surface renewal theory.

Broader Impacts
The proposed activity will benefit society by contributing to our understanding of the natural environment. This improved understanding will lead to better parameterizations of air-sea fluxes relevant to global climate change and numerical weather forecast modeling. The importance of air-sea fluxes to the Earth's climate is well documented. Heat, in the form of latent heat released by condensing water vapor, provides much of the energy driving global atmospheric circulation. Gas transfer plays an integral role in biogeochemical cycling and is of interest because of societal concerns about the effect of greenhouse gases and anthropogenically induced global climate change.

The project will also promote teaching, training, and learning through participation of a graduate student (recruited minority, see below), sending the graduate student to scientific meetings to present results, and mentoring a current junior staff member during her undergraduate studies. The activity will broaden the participation of underrepresented groups by recruiting a minority graduate student (using resources such as the ASLO Minorities in Aquatic Sciences Program), employing a part-time female technician who is also a full-time student in the oceanography program at the University of Washington, and by the PI annually teaching in a middle school program at Seattle Girls School with a high percentage of minority students. The activity will enhance infrastructure for research and education by building a unique facility for studying air-sea interaction that will be made available for use by others. The activity will have broad dissemination of results to enhance scientific and technological understanding thorough participation in the annual College of Engineering Open House, establishment of a web site devoted to dissemination of data and results from the project, and publications in peer reviewed journals..

PUBLICATIONS PRODUCED AS A RESULT OF THIS RESEARCH

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Asher, WE "The effects of experimental uncertainty in parameterizing air-sea gas exchange using tracer experiment data" ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS , v.9 , 2009 , p.131 View record at Web of Science
Asher, WE; Litchendorf, TM "Visualizing near-surface concentration fluctuations using laser-induced fluorescence" EXPERIMENTS IN FLUIDS , v.46 , 2009 , p.243 View record at Web of Science 10.1007/s00348-008-0554-
McGillis, WR; Dacey, JWH; Ware, JD; Ho, DT; Bent, JT; Asher, WE; Zappa, CJ; Raymond, PA; Wanninkhof, R; Komori, S "Air-water flux reconciliation between the atmospheric CO2 profile and mass balance techniques" TRANSPORT AT THE AIR-SEA INTERFACE: MEASUREMENTS, MODELS AND PARAMETRIZATIONS , 2007 , p.181 View record at Web of Science
Wanninkhof, R., W.E. Asher, D.T. Ho, C.S. Sweeny and W.R. McGillis "Advances in Quantifying Air-Sea Gas Exchange and Environmental Forcing" Ann. Rev. Marine Science , v.1 , 2009 , p.213-244
Zappa, CJ; McGillis, WR; Raymond, PA; Edson, JB; Hintsa, EJ; Zemmelink, HJ; Dacey, JWH; Ho, DT "Environmental turbulent mixing controls on air-water gas exchange in marine and aquatic systems" GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS , v.34 , 2007 View record at Web of Science 10.1029/2006GL02879

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