High-precision methodology for quantifying gas point source emission

2021 ◽  
Vol 320 ◽  
pp. 128672
Author(s):  
Tianqi Shi ◽  
Zeyu Han ◽  
Wei Gong ◽  
Xin Ma ◽  
Ge Han
1995 ◽  
Vol 85 (6) ◽  
pp. 1847-1857
Author(s):  
David M. Steinberg ◽  
Nitzan Rabinowitz ◽  
Yair Shimshoni ◽  
Daphna Mizrachi

Abstract The geometric configuration of a seismographic network has important consequences for the ability to determine hypocenters with high precision. We present a method for optimal configuration when the network must monitor a system of faults. Our optimality criterion is drawn from the statistical theory of experimental design and can be effeciently maximized using an extension of the DETMAX algorithm. Our work generalizes that of Rabinowitz and Steinberg (1990), which treated the problem of optimal network configuration for monitoring a point source.


2011 ◽  
Vol 4 (9) ◽  
pp. 1735-1758 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Krings ◽  
K. Gerilowski ◽  
M. Buchwitz ◽  
M. Reuter ◽  
A. Tretner ◽  
...  

Abstract. MAMAP is an airborne passive remote sensing instrument designed to measure the dry columns of methane (CH4) and carbon dioxide (CO2). The MAMAP instrument comprises two optical grating spectrometers: the first observing in the short wave infrared band (SWIR) at 1590–1690 nm to measure CO2 and CH4 absorptions, and the second in the near infrared (NIR) at 757–768 nm to measure O2 absorptions for reference/normalisation purposes. MAMAP can be operated in both nadir and zenith geometry during the flight. Mounted on an aeroplane, MAMAP surveys areas on regional to local scales with a ground pixel resolution of approximately 29 m × 33 m for a typical aircraft altitude of 1250 m and a velocity of 200 km h−1. The retrieval precision of the measured column relative to background is typically ≲1% (1σ). MAMAP measurements are valuable to close the gap between satellite data, having global coverage but with a rather coarse resolution, on the one hand, and highly accurate in situ measurements with sparse coverage on the other hand. In July 2007, test flights were performed over two coal-fired power plants operated by Vattenfall Europe Generation AG: Jänschwalde (27.4 Mt CO2 yr−1) and Schwarze Pumpe (11.9 Mt CO2 yr−1), about 100 km southeast of Berlin, Germany. By using two different inversion approaches, one based on an optimal estimation scheme to fit Gaussian plume models from multiple sources to the data, and another using a simple Gaussian integral method, the emission rates can be determined and compared with emissions reported by Vattenfall Europe. An extensive error analysis for the retrieval's dry column results (XCO2 and XCH4) and for the two inversion methods has been performed. Both methods – the Gaussian plume model fit and the Gaussian integral method – are capable of deriving estimates for strong point source emission rates that are within ±10% of the reported values, given appropriate flight patterns and detailed knowledge of wind conditions.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hamza Kouichi ◽  
Pierre Ngae ◽  
Pramod Kumar ◽  
Amir-Ali Feiz ◽  
Nadir Bekka

Abstract. This study presents a methodology for the optimization of a monitoring network of sensors measuring the polluting substances in an urban environment with a view to estimate an unknown emission source. The methodology was presented by coupling the Simulated Annealing algorithm with the renormalization inversion technique and the Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) modeling approach. Performance of a network was analyzed by reconstructing the unknown continuous point emissions using the concentration measurements from the sensors in that optimized network. This approach was successfully applied and validated with 20 trials of the Mock Urban Setting Test (MUST) tracer field experiment in an urban-like environment. The optimal networks in the MUST urban region enabled to reduce the size of original network (40-sensors) to ~ 1/3rd (13-sensors) and to 1/4th (10-sensors). The 10 and 13 sensors optimal networks have estimated the averaged location errors of 19.20 m and 17.42 m, respectively, which are comparable to 14.62 m from the original 40-sensors network. In 80 % trials, emission rates with the 10 and 13 sensors networks were estimated within a factor of two which are also comparable to 75 % from the original network. This study presents the first application of the renormalization data-assimilation approach for the optimal network design to estimate a continuous point source emission in an urban-like environment.


2019 ◽  
Vol 266-267 ◽  
pp. 148-156 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pierre Dumortier ◽  
Marc Aubinet ◽  
Frédéric Lebeau ◽  
Alwin Naiken ◽  
Bernard Heinesch

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