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Saudi Researchers Find Dust Clouds Three Times Larger Than Previously Thought

In a new study in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, KAUST researchers use refined mathematical models to show that dust in the region maybe three times larger than previously thought, which has a profound impact on the deployment of solar technology.

Dust is an effective way to move minerals across sea and land, acting as a fertilizer by distributing nutrients long distances. At the same time, it can be detrimental to infrastructure and technology, which is why an accurate understanding of its effects will assist in national policies for sustainability.

Current mathematical models used by scientists primarily analyze dust particles of fine size (less than ten micrometres) and are not effective at predicting the impact dust particles of coarse or gigantic size have.

Using data collected by instruments set up by KAUST since 2012 and NASA satellites, the new study finds estimates from previous models underestimate dust deposition and emission by three times.

Further, by incorporating the new data, the KAUST model shows that the larger particles contribute to more than 80% of dust mass on land, where most solar technology is deployed.

This dust diminishes the effectiveness of solar technology, with the study estimating a 15% and 45% loss in efficiency (assuming a weekly cleaning cycle) for solar panels deployed on the west and east coasts of Saudi Arabia, respectively.

The loss comes from two means. First is the dust that settles on, or soils, the technology itself, blocking solar radiation. At the same time, dust in the atmosphere can diminish solar radiation from reaching the instrument.

The efficiency loss from deposited dust was about twice as high as that from radiative dust in the atmosphere.

KAUST research scientist Dr. Mokhammad Suleiman Mostamandi served as the first author. KAUST research scientists Dr. Sergey Osipov, Dr. Ilia Shevchenko, and Dr. Alex Ukhov also made major contributions to the study. As did Professor Emeritus Johann Engelbrecht of the Desert Research Institute in the United States.

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Saudi Gazette

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