Hi All
Like several previous workers the authors of the paper, use the accumulation-mode spread of aerosol size between latitudes 45 N and 45 S all the time at a rate to offset RCP 8.5.
The effort or cost needed for marine cloud brightening is in proportion the volume of water that we have to filter and spray. The value of what the spray does depends on the number of successful nucleations.
We think that the right size of aerosol salt particle has a mass of 10^ -14 grams. If it was a completely dry sphere its diameter would be about 200 nanometres but it is more likely to be a brick shape in strong brine.
The graph below from Wikipedia shows that 200 nanometres is at the bottom of the slope of the accumulation mode. The top of the accumulation mode is at about 1.2 microns. The cube of the ratio of diameters is 216. This means that using the full spread of the accumulation mode will involve making some condensation nuclei far bigger, and so more expensive, than we actually need.

As second reason is that the Stokes drag tending to accelerate a drop in turbulent flow on depends on diameter not projected area while the inertia opposing acceleration depends on the cube. If drops of spray in a turbulent air stream have a wide spread of inertias they will also have a wide spread of relative velocities and so more chance of coalescence.
A third reason in favour of a monodisperse spray is that heavier condensation nuclei will nucleate at a lower relative humidity than lighter ones. This will suck water vapour from the surrounding air and so reduce its relative humidity and make it harder for the small ones to nucleate. The transfer rate of water vapour depends of vapour pressure difference and surface area. Being big earlier than rival nuclei gives a further advantage. This is the same with wolves and hyenas.
It might be convenient for climate modellers to use the wide spread of standard, naturally-occurring aerosol built into modelling software but please, please, please could somebody try monodisperse spray to avoid errors of 200.
Please also give us an opinion about whether 10 ^ -14 grams is the right choice. Can we reduce coalescence even further with electrostatic charge?
Stephen Salter
Emeritus Professor of Engineering Design
School of Engineering
Mayfield Road EH9 3 DW
University of Edinburgh
Scotland.
Tel 0131 662 1180
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Hi All
I got this from Wikipedia

Stephen Salter
Emeritus Professor of Engineering Design
School of Engineering
Mayfield Road EH9 3 DW
University of Edinburgh
Scotland.
Tel 0131 662 1180
On 14 Mar 2021, at 08:11, SALTER Stephen <S.Sa...@ed.ac.uk> wrote:
Hi All
I got this from Wikipedia
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