Trees and water

Engineered amorphous silica particles with minimized heterogeneous uptake behavior for stratospheric aerosol injection

Engineered amorphous silica particles with minimized heterogeneous uptake behavior for stratospheric aerosol injection

Tzemah Kislev, Alina Berkman, Gal Schwartz Roitman, Kariene Neiman, Anais Lostier, Subhadarsi Nayak, Amir Goldbourt, David Avnir, Manolis N. Romanias

In collaboration with our colleagues from:

Hebrew University, Tel Aviv University, IMT Nord Europe

Abstract


Solar radiation modification via stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI) has been proposed as a potential approach to partially offset anthropogenic climate warming. However, its feasibility is constrained by uncertainties associated with heterogeneous interactions between aerosol particles and trace gases relevant to stratospheric ozone chemistry.

Here, we develop and experimentally evaluate engineered amorphous silica particles designed for SAI-relevant functionality, with particular emphasis on minimizing heterogeneous uptake behavior under stratospheric conditions. Controlled synthesis, thermal treatment, and surface functionalization yield dense, spherical particles with reduced densities of accessible surface silanol groups, substantial hydrophobic surface functionalization, and stable hydrophobic characteristics under ultraviolet (UV) irradiation and exposure to acidic species.

Heterogeneous uptake of key trace gases, including HCl, HNO3, N2O5, and O3, was measured under low-temperature conditions relevant to the lower stratosphere. The engineered particles exhibit substantially reduced uptake compared with crystalline quartz, which is used here as a low-uptake benchmark surface, with uptake coefficients approaching experimental detection limits and interactions dominated primarily by weak surface association.

These findings extend benchmark measurements identifying amorphous silica as a low-uptake reference material and demonstrate that heterogeneous uptake behavior can be further suppressed through controlled surface engineering. The consistently low uptake observed across multiple trace gases suggests a substantially reduced potential for sustained heterogeneous gas–surface processing under representative stratospheric conditions, supporting the potential compatibility of such particles with ozone-relevant atmospheric chemistry.

Related Publications

Related Publications

Related Publications

A river

R. Yahav, A. Spector, D. Kushnir, and M. C. Waxman

In collaboration with our colleagues from:

Columbia University

From Particles to Policy: Technical Building Blocks for Multi-State SAI Coordination

Read more

Trees and water

T. Kislev, A. Berkman, G. Schwartz Roitman, K. Neiman, A. Lostier, S. Nayak, A. Goldbourt, D. Avnir, M. N. Romanias

In collaboration with our colleagues from:

Hebrew University, Tel Aviv University, IMT Nord Europe

Engineered amorphous silica particles with minimized heterogeneous uptake behavior for stratospheric aerosol injection

Read more

Sunrise and mountains

Y. Segev, E. Y. Levine, Y. Bar-Yoseph, O. Amsallem, Y. Dagan, E. Laor, S. Rahamim, A. Luski, E. Daniel, E. Hettiarachchi, A. Spector

In collaboration with our colleagues from:

UC San Diego, Technion

Efficient dispersal of submicron solid particles for stratospheric aerosol injection

Read more

Clouds

Stardust Labs

Composite sub-micron solid particles engineered to enable safe, controllable, efficient, and practical SAI

Read more

Wheat field

Y. Lederer, N. Wygoda, D. Halbertal and B. E. J. Rose

In collaboration with our colleagues from:

SUNY (Albany)

Solid-particle stratospheric aerosol injection: a 2-D modelling exploration of the design space

Read more

Forest

A. Lostier, Y. Segev, T. Kislev, G. Schwartz Roitman, N. Locoge, M. N. Romanias

In collaboration with our colleagues from:

IMT Nord Europe

Uptake of stratospheric species on minerals proposed for stratospheric aerosol injection

Read more

Earth From space

E. Waxman, A. Spector, Y. Lederer, Y. Segev, T. Kislev, Y. Yedvab, D. Kushnir, and R. Yahav

A proposal for the safety and controllability requirements that SRM systems should meet

Read more

Sunlight shining in a forest

T. Kuzibardov, A. Yaverboim, T. Kislev, E. Abramov

In consultation with our colleagues from:

The amorphous silica industry

Feasibility Study for Industrial Scale Submicronic Engineered Amorphous Silica Particle (SEASP) Manufacturing for Stratospheric Aerosol Injection (SAI)

Read more