Publication Date:
2013-08-29
Description:
Annular denuder systems (ADS) are designed to sample both gases and particles from ambient air without cross interference. The ADS's were used to detect chemical gradients over rural forest canopies. Accurate and precise methods for the sampling and analysis of low concentrations of gaseous and particulate species over short sampling periods were developed. Typical analytical precision data for nitrate and sulfate are shown. Both sampling and analytical precision data for a 2 hour test using four collocated ADS's are presented. On this particular day, the overall precision for HNO3 was unusually poor. The overall precision for the major constituents of interest is generally about 3 to 5 percent for typical ambient concentrations. The ADS's could potentially be used to determine the concentrations of HNO3 and fine-particle nitrate in the stratosphere, and to simultaneously characterize the chemical composition of stratospheric aerosols. Assuming 50 mb pressure, a 2 hour sampling time, a 50 Lpm sampling rate, and a low blank value, an overal precision of about 15 percent should be possible for 1 ppbv of HNO3 or nitrate, which would include nitric-acid trihydrate (NAT); and pump-driven systems could accommodate more complex systems involving denuders and filter packs in sequence. Alternate coatings could possibly be developed to selectively sample species such as Cl2 and ClNO3. The ADS's might also be useful in laboratory studies of heterogeneous chemical reactions involving NAT aerosols.
Keywords:
GEOPHYSICS
Type:
NASA. Ames Research Center, International Workshop on Stratospheric Aerosols: Measurements, Properties, and Effects; p 42-46
Format:
text
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