Authors
Brian M Lerner, Jessica Gilman, Megan Dumas, Dagen Hughes, Alyssa Jaksich, Courtney Dyan Hatch, Martin Graus, Carsten Warneke, Eric C Apel, Rebecca S Hornbrook, John S Holloway, Joost A De Gouw
Publication date
2014/12
Journal
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
Volume
2014
Pages
A33B-3180
Description
Accurate measurement of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in the troposphere is critical for the understanding of emissions and physical and chemical processes that can impact both air quality and climate. Airborne VOC measurements have proven especially challenging due to the requirement of both high sensitivity (pptv) and short sample collection times (≤ 15 s) to maximize spatial resolution and sampling frequency for targeted plume analysis. The use of stainless steel canisters to collect whole air samples (WAS) for post-flight analysis has been pioneered by the groups of D. Blake and E. Atlas [Blake et al., 1992; Atlas et al., 1993]. For the 2013 Southeast Nexus Study (SENEX), the NOAA ESRL CSD laboratory undertook WAS measurements for the first time. This required the construction of three new, highly-automated, and field-portable instruments designed to sample, analyze, and clean the canisters for …
Scholar articles
BM Lerner, J Gilman, M Dumas, D Hughes, A Jaksich… - AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts, 2014