An intercomparison of CH<sub>3</sub>O<sub>2</sub> measurements by fluorescence assay by gas expansion and cavity ring-down spectroscopy within HIRAC (Highly Instrumented Reactor for Atmospheric Chemistry)
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Published:2020-05-15
Issue:5
Volume:13
Page:2441-2456
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ISSN:1867-8548
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Container-title:Atmospheric Measurement Techniques
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Meas. Tech.
Author:
Onel Lavinia, Brennan Alexander, Gianella Michele, Hooper James, Ng Nicole, Hancock Gus, Whalley Lisa, Seakins Paul W.ORCID, Ritchie Grant A. D., Heard Dwayne E.ORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Simultaneous measurements of CH3O2 radical concentrations have
been performed using two different methods in the Leeds HIRAC (Highly
Instrumented Reactor for Atmospheric Chemistry) chamber at 295 K and in
80 mbar of a mixture of 3:1 He∕O2 and 100 or 1000 mbar of synthetic
air. The first detection method consisted of the indirect detection of
CH3O2 using the conversion of CH3O2
into CH3O by
excess NO with subsequent detection of CH3O by fluorescence assay by
gas expansion (FAGE). The FAGE instrument was calibrated for CH3O2
in two ways. In the first method, a known concentration of CH3O2
was generated using the 185 nm photolysis of water vapour in synthetic air
at atmospheric pressure followed by the conversion of the generated OH
radicals to CH3O2 by reaction with CH4∕O2. This
calibration can be used for experiments performed in HIRAC at 1000 mbar in
air. In the second method, calibration was achieved by generating a near
steady state of CH3O2 and then switching off the photolysis lamps
within HIRAC and monitoring the subsequent decay of CH3O2, which
was controlled via its self-reaction, and analysing the decay using second-order kinetics. This calibration could be used for experiments performed at
all pressures. In the second detection method, CH3O2 was
measured directly using cavity ring-down spectroscopy (CRDS) using the
absorption at 7487.98 cm−1 in the A←X (ν12) band
with the optical path along the ∼1.4 m chamber diameter.
Analysis of the second-order kinetic decays of CH3O2 by
self-reaction monitored by CRDS has been used for the determination of the
CH3O2 absorption cross section at 7487.98 cm−1, both at 100 mbar of air and at 80 mbar of a 3:1 He∕O2 mixture, from which σCH3O2=(1.49±0.19)×10-20 cm2 molecule−1 was determined for both pressures. The absorption spectrum
of CH3O2 between 7486 and 7491 cm−1 did not change shape when
the total pressure was increased to 1000 mbar, from which we determined that
σCH3O2 is independent of pressure over the pressure range
100–1000 mbar in air. CH3O2 was generated in HIRAC using either
the photolysis of Cl2 with UV black lamps in the presence of CH4 and O2 or the photolysis of acetone at 254 nm in the presence of O2. At 1000 mbar of synthetic air the correlation plot of
[CH3O2]FAGE against [CH3O2]CRDS gave a
gradient of 1.09±0.06. At 100 mbar of synthetic air the FAGE–CRDS correlation plot had a gradient of 0.95±0.024, and at 80 mbar of
3:1 He∕O2 mixture the correlation plot gradient was 1.03±0.05.
These results provide a validation of the FAGE method to determine
concentrations of CH3O2.
Funder
Natural Environment Research Council
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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