Applications of wavelet transform to quantum cascade laser spectrometer for atmospheric trace gas measurements

2012 ◽  
Vol 108 (4) ◽  
pp. 951-963 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jingsong Li ◽  
Uwe Parchatka ◽  
Horst Fischer
2005 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rodrigo Jimenez ◽  
Scott Herndon ◽  
Joanne H. Shorter ◽  
David D. Nelson ◽  
J. B. McManus ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 101-117 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ece Satar ◽  
Peter Nyfeler ◽  
Bernhard Bereiter ◽  
Céline Pascale ◽  
Bernhard Niederhauser ◽  
...  

Abstract. Atmospheric trace gas measurements of greenhouse gases are critical in their precision and accuracy. In the past 5 years, atmospheric measurement and gas metrology communities have turned their attention to possible surface effects due to pressure and temperature variations during a standard cylinder's lifetime. This study concentrates on this issue by introducing newly built small-volume aluminum and steel cylinders which enable the investigation of trace gases and their affinity for adsorption and desorption on various surfaces over a set of temperature and pressure ranges. The presented experiments are designed to test the filling pressure dependencies up to 30 bar and temperature dependencies from −10 ∘C up to 180 ∘C for these prototype cylinders. We present measurements of CO2, CH4, CO and H2O using a cavity ring-down spectroscopy analyzer under these conditions. Moreover, we investigated CO2 amount fractions using a novel quantum cascade laser spectrometer system enabling measurements at pressures as a low as 5 mbar. This extensive dataset revealed that for absolute pressures down to 150 mbar the enhancement in the amount fraction of CO2 relative to its initial value (at 1200 mbar absolute) is limited to 0.12 µmol mol−1 for the prototype aluminum cylinder. Up to 80 ∘C, the aluminum cylinder showed superior results and less response to varying temperature compared to the steel cylinder. For CO2, these changes were insignificant at 80 ∘C for the aluminum cylinder, whereas a 0.11 µmol mol−1 enhancement for the steel cylinder was observed. High-temperature experiments showed that for both cylinders irreversible temperature effects occur especially above 130 ∘C.


Author(s):  
J. B. McManus ◽  
M. S. Zahniser ◽  
D. D. Nelson ◽  
R. M. McGovern ◽  
M. Agnese ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
J. B. McManus ◽  
M. S. Zahniser ◽  
D. D. Nelson ◽  
J. H. Shorter ◽  
R. A. Wehr ◽  
...  

Sensors ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (7) ◽  
pp. 2380 ◽  
Author(s):  
Silvia Viciani ◽  
Alessio Montori ◽  
Antonio Chiarugi ◽  
Francesco D’Amato

Trace gas concentration measurements in the stratosphere and troposphere are critically required as inputs to constrain climate models. For this purpose, measurement campaigns on stratospheric aircraft and balloons are being carried out all over the world, each one involving sensors which are tailored for the specific gas and environmental conditions. This paper describes an automated, portable, mid-infrared quantum cascade laser spectrometer, for in situ carbon monoxide mixing ratio measurements in the stratosphere and troposphere. The instrument was designed to be versatile, suitable for easy installation on different platforms and capable of operating completely unattended, without the presence of an operator, not only during one flight but for the whole period of a campaign. The spectrometer features a small size (80 × 25 × 41 cm3), light weight (23 kg) and low power consumption (85 W typical), without being pressurized and without the need of calibration on the ground or during in-flight operation. The device was tested in the laboratory and in-field during a research campaign carried out in Nepal in summer 2017, onboard the stratospheric aircraft M55 Geophysica. The instrument worked extremely well, without external maintenance during all flights, proving an in-flight sensitivity of 1–2 ppbV with a time resolution of 1 s.


2014 ◽  
Vol 6 (15) ◽  
pp. 5483-5488 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jingsong Li ◽  
Uwe Parchatka ◽  
Horst Fischer

An adoptive de-noising technique based on Wavelet Transform and a zero-air based background subtraction technique have been successfully applied to improve the H2CO sensor performance, yielding sub-ppb measurement precision without reducing the fast temporal response.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ece Satar ◽  
Peter Nyfeler ◽  
Bernhard Bereiter ◽  
Céline Pascale ◽  
Bernhard Niederhauser ◽  
...  

Abstract. Atmospheric trace gas measurements of greenhouse gases are critical in their precision and accuracy. In the past 5 years, atmospheric measurement and gas metrology communities have turned their attention to possible surface effects due to pressure and temperature variations during a standard cylinder’s lifetime. This study concentrates on this issue by introducing newly built small volume aluminum and steel cylinders which enable the investigation of trace gases and their affinity for adsorption/desorption on various surfaces over a set of temperature and pressure ranges. The presented experiments are designed to test the filling pressure dependencies up to 30 bar, and temperature dependencies from −10 °C up to 180 °C for these prototype cylinders. We present measurements of CO2, CH4, CO and H2O using a cavity ring down spectroscopy analyzer under these conditions. Moreover, we investigated CO2 amount fractions using a novel quantum cascade laser spectrometer system enabling measurements at pressures as a low as 5 mbar. This extensive dataset revealed that until pressures as low as 150 mbar the enhancement in the amount fraction of CO2 relative to its initial value (at 1200 mbar) is limited to 0.12 μmol mol−1 for the prototype aluminum cylinder. Up to 80 °C, the aluminum cylinder showed superior results and less response to varying temperature compared to the steel cylinder. For CO2, these changes were insignificant at 80 °C for the aluminum cylinder, whereas a 0.11 μmol mol−1 enhancement for the steel cylinder was observed. High temperature experiments showed that for both cylinders irreversible temperature effects occur especially above 130 °C.


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