Fine and Coarse Dust Effects on Radiative Forcing, Mass Deposition, and
Solar Devices over the Middle East
Abstract
In desert regions like the Middle East (ME), dust has a profound impact
on the environment,
climate, air quality, and solar devices. The size of dust particles
determines the extent of these
effects. Dust deposition (DD) measurements show that coarse dust
particles with geometric
radius r > 10 μm comprise most of the deposited mass.
Still, these particles are not represented in
the current models that are tuned to fit the observed aerosol visible
optical depth (AOD). As a
result, the existing models and reanalysis products underestimate DD and
dust emission (DE)
almost three times. This is the first study to constrain the dust
simulations by both AOD and DD
measurements to quantify the effect of coarse and fine dust using the
WRF-Chem model. We
found that, on average, coarse dust contributes less than 10% to dust
shortwave (SW) radiative
forcing (RF) at the surface but comprises more than 70% of DE. Annual
mean net RF over the
Arabian Peninsula and regional seas locally reaches -25 W m-2. Airborne
fine dust particles
with radii r < 3 μm are mainly responsible for the significant
dimming (5-10%) of solar
radiation, cooling the surface and hampering solar energy production.
However, dust mass
deposition is primarily linked to coarse particles, decreasing the
efficiency of Photovoltaic panels
by 2-5% per day. Therefore, incorporating coarse dust in model
simulations and data assimilation
would improve the overall description of the dust mass balance and its
impact on environmental
systems and solar devices.