Skip to content
GitLab
Projects Groups Topics Snippets
  • /
  • Help
    • Help
    • Support
    • Community forum
    • Submit feedback
  • Sign in
  • GHOST GHOST
  • Project information
    • Project information
    • Activity
    • Labels
    • Members
  • Repository
    • Repository
    • Files
    • Commits
    • Branches
    • Tags
    • Contributor statistics
    • Graph
    • Compare revisions
  • Issues 24
    • Issues 24
    • List
    • Boards
    • Service Desk
    • Milestones
  • Merge requests 0
    • Merge requests 0
  • CI/CD
    • CI/CD
    • Pipelines
    • Jobs
    • Schedules
  • Deployments
    • Deployments
    • Environments
    • Releases
  • Monitor
    • Monitor
    • Incidents
  • Analytics
    • Analytics
    • Value stream
    • CI/CD
    • Repository
  • Wiki
    • Wiki
  • Snippets
    • Snippets
  • Activity
  • Graph
  • Create a new issue
  • Jobs
  • Commits
  • Issue Boards
Collapse sidebar
  • Atmospheric Composition
  • GHOSTGHOST
  • Wiki
  • Measurement Procedure Standardisations

Measurement Procedure Standardisations · Changes

Page history
Update Measurement Procedure Standardisations authored Jul 18, 2019 by dbowdalo's avatar dbowdalo
Hide whitespace changes
Inline Side-by-side
Measurement-Procedure-Standardisations.md
View page @ 6951e0b3
......@@ -64,7 +64,8 @@ Now the
| Method | Principle | Typical Operation | Known Issues | Compounds |
| ------ | ----------| ----------------- | ------------ | --------- |
| Ultraviolet Photometry | Operates on the principle that a specific species efficiently absorbs light at a known wavelength in the UV range. This is the case for ozone, at 253.65nm. The degree to which the UV light is absorbed by a specific species is directly related to the species concentration as described by the Beer-Lambert Law (I/Io = e−KLC; K = molecular absorption coefficient at STP (308 cm-1 atm-1 for O3), L = optical path length of cell, C = species concentration , I = light intensity of sample gas, Io = light intensity of sample without measured species (reference gas) ) | <ul><li>Ambient air is continuously drawn through the analyser by a vacuum pump.</li><li><li>Sample is split into two flow paths. One path incorporates a scrubber which selectively removes ozone, while the other path does not.</li>
| Ultraviolet Photometry | Operates on the principle that a specific species efficiently absorbs light at a known wavelength in the UV range. This is the case for ozone, at 253.65nm. The degree to which the UV light is absorbed by a specific species is directly related to the species concentration as described by the Beer-Lambert Law (I/Io = e−KLC; K = molecular absorption coefficient at STP (308 cm-1 atm-1 for O3), L = optical path length of cell, C = species concentration , I = light intensity of sample gas, Io = light intensity of sample without measured species (reference gas) ) | <ul><li>Ambient air is continuously drawn through the analyser by a vacuum pump.</li>
<li>Sample is split into two flow paths. One path incorporates a scrubber which selectively removes ozone, while the other path does not.</li>
<li>Both flow paths are connected to a solenoid valve, which switches at a fixed interval to allow either the sample gas stream (I), or the scrubbed, reference gas stream (Io), to flow through a quartz tube (cell) of accurately known length.</li>
<li>Typically a mercury vapour lamp at one end of the quartz cell produces a monochromatic beam of ultraviolet light at 254 nm. A vacuum diode at the opposite end of the cell measures the intensity of transmitted light (I/Io).</li>
<li>The intensities of 254 nm UV light transmitted through the sample (I) and ozone-free reference gas streams (Io) are related to the concentration (C) of ozone in the sample gas stream according to the Beer-Lambert Law.</li>
......
Clone repository
  • EBAS Network Processing
  • Home
  • Measurement Procedure Standardisations