posted on 2011-07-15, 13:04authored byAnna Marie Hollingsworth
A broadband version of cavity enhanced absorption spectroscopy (BBCEAS) has been
applied to measure the ambient concentrations of reactive trace gases, particularly nitrogen
dioxide (NO2) in the polluted urban environment and molecular iodine (I2) in the marine
boundary layer. The spectrometer’s light source, a light emitting diode (LED), enables
absorption spectra of gas samples to be acquired over 50 nm bandwidths at visible and nearultraviolet
wavelengths. Differential optical absorption spectroscopy (DOAS) is then applied to
unambiguously identify and quantify the various absorbers present in the samples.
Especially difficult operating conditions were encountered during the instrument’s first
field deployment onboard the research vessel RRS Discovery. As a result, the instrument did
not achieve the I2 detection limits it had demonstrated in laboratory testing and was unable to
detect any I2 signal in the mid‐Atlantic Ocean during the Reactive Halogens in the Marine
Boundary Layer Experiment. However, iodine was detected around many night‐time low tides
during the BIOFLUX II campaign at the Mace Head Atmospheric Research Station in County
Galway, Ireland. The maximum I2 concentration of 608 pptv (parts per trillion by volume)
correlated with the campaign’s lowest tide, and is three times greater than any previous report
of atmospheric I2 concentrations. The BIOFLUX observations support current understanding
that coastal I2 derives from seaweed (particularly kelp species) exposed to air around low tide.
LED‐BBCEAS measurements of NO2 made on the University campus during the
Leicester Air Quality Measurement Project are compared with data from two
chemiluminescence instruments. The need to closely co‐locate instruments during
comparisons of the various techniques is discussed, and evidence of a possible interference in
the chemiluminescence measurements has been found.
Funding
European Science Foundation’s Research Networking Programme (INTROP);Natural Environment Research Council (NERC);NE/D00652X/1