Abstract
Abstract. A major bottleneck regarding the efforts to better quantify greenhouse gas fluxes, map sources and
sinks, and understand flux regulation is the shortage of low-cost and accurate-enough measurement
methods. The studies of methane (CH4) – a long-lived greenhouse gas increasing rapidly
but irregularly in the atmosphere for unclear reasons, and with poorly understood source–sink
attribution – suffer from such method limitations. This study presents new calibration and data
processing approaches for use of a low-cost CH4 sensor in flux chambers. Results show
that the change in relative CH4 levels can be determined at rather high accuracy in the
2–700 ppm mole fraction range, with modest efforts of collecting reference samples
in situ and without continuous access to expensive reference instruments. This opens
possibilities for more affordable and time-effective measurements of CH4 in flux
chambers. To facilitate such measurements, we also provide a description for building and using an
Arduino logger for CH4, carbon dioxide (CO2), relative humidity, and
temperature.
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
33 articles.
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