University of Wollongong
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Performance of an open-path near-infrared measurement system for measurements of CO2 and CH4 during extended field trials

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-17, 13:26 authored by Nicholas M Deutscher, Travis A Naylor, Christopher GR Caldow, Hamish L McDougall, Alex G Carter, David WT Griffith
Open-path measurements of atmospheric composition provide spatial averages of trace gases that are less sensitive to small-scale variations and the effects of meteorology. In this study we introduce improvements to open-path near-infrared (OP-NIR) Fourier transform spectrometer measurements of COspan classCombining double low line"inline-formula"2/span and CHspan classCombining double low line"inline-formula"4/span. In an extended field trial, the OP-NIR achieved measurement repeatability 6 times better for COspan classCombining double low line"inline-formula"2/span (0.28 ppm) and 10 times better for CHspan classCombining double low line"inline-formula"4/span (2.1 ppb) over a 1.55 km one-way path than its predecessor. The measurement repeatability was independent of path length up to 1.55 km, the longest distance tested. Comparisons to co-located in situ measurements under well-mixed conditions characterise biases of 1.41 % for COspan classCombining double low line"inline-formula"2/span and 1.61 % for CHspan classCombining double low line"inline-formula"4/span relative to in situ measurements calibrated to World Meteorological Organisation-Global Atmosphere Watch (WMO-GAW) scales. The OP-NIR measurements can detect signals due to local photosynthesis and respiration, and local point sources of CHspan classCombining double low line"inline-formula"4/span. The OP-NIR is well-suited for deployment in urban or rural settings to quantify atmospheric composition on kilometre scales./p.

Funding

Australian Research Council (FT180100327)

History

Journal title

Atmospheric Measurement Techniques

Volume

14

Issue

4

Pagination

3119-3130

Language

English

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