Literature DB >> 33643474

Effect of Polyoxymethylene (POM-H Delrin) offgassing within Pandora head sensor on direct sun and multi-axis formaldehyde column measurements in 2016 - 2019.

Elena Spinei1, Martin Tiefengraber2,3, Moritz Müller2,3, Manuel Gebetsberger2, Alexander Cede2, Luke Valin4, James Szykman4, Andrew Whitehill4, Alexander Kostakis5, Fernando Santos6, Nader Abbuhasan7, Xiaoyi Zhao8, Vitali Fioletov8, Sum Chi Lee8, Robert Swap9.   

Abstract

Analysis of formaldehyde measurements by the Pandora spectrometer systems between 2016 and 2019 suggested that there was a temperature dependent process inside Pandora head sensor that emitted formaldehyde. Some parts in the head sensor were manufactured from thermal plastic polyoxymethylene homopolimer (E.I. Du Pont de Nemour & Co., USA: POM-H Delrin®) and were responsible for formaldehyde production. Laboratory analysis of the four Pandora head sensors showed that internal formaldehyde production had exponential temperature dependence with a damping coefficient of 0.0911±0.0024 °C-1 and the exponential function amplitude ranging from 0.0041 DU to 0.049 DU. No apparent dependency on the head sensor age and heating/cooling rates was detected. The total amount of formaldehyde internally generated by the POM-H Delrin components and contributing to the direct sun measurements were estimated based on the head sensor temperature and solar zenith angle of the measurements. Measurements in winter, during colder (<10°C) days in general and at high solar zenith angles (> 75 °) were minimally impacted. Measurements during hot days (>28°C) and small solar zenith angles had up to 1 DU (2.69×1016 molecules/cm2) contribution from POM-H Delrin parts. Multi-axis differential slant column densities were minimally impacted (< 0.01 DU) due to the reference spectrum collected within a short time period with a small difference in head sensor temperature. Three new POM-H Delrin free Pandora head sensors (manufactured in summer 2019) were evaluated for temperature dependent attenuation across the entire spectral range (300 to 530 nm). No formaldehyde or any other absorption above the instrumental noise was observed across the entire spectral range.

Entities:  

Year:  2021        PMID: 33643474      PMCID: PMC7903538          DOI: 10.5194/amt-14-647-2021

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Atmos Meas Tech        ISSN: 1867-1381            Impact factor:   4.176


  4 in total

1.  Effects of local meteorology and aerosols on ozone and nitrogen dioxide retrievals from OMI and pandora spectrometers in Maryland, USA during DISCOVER-AQ 2011.

Authors:  Andra J Reed; Anne M Thompson; Debra E Kollonige; Douglas K Martins; Maria A Tzortziou; Jay R Herman; Timothy A Berkoff; Nader K Abuhassan; Alexander Cede
Journal:  J Atmos Chem       Date:  2013-04-19       Impact factor: 2.158

2.  The first evaluation of formaldehyde column observations by improved Pandora spectrometers during the KORUS-AQ field study.

Authors:  Elena Spinei; Andrew Whitehill; Alan Fried; Martin Tiefengraber; Travis N Knepp; Scott Herndon; Jay R Herman; Moritz Müller; Nader Abuhassan; Alexander Cede; Dirk Richter; James Walega; James Crawford; James Szykman; Lukas Valin; David J Williams; Russell Long; Robert J Swap; Youngjae Lee; Nabil Nowak; Brett Poche
Journal:  Atmos Chem Phys       Date:  2018       Impact factor: 6.133

3.  Temperature dependent absorption cross-sections of O2-O2 collision pairs between 340 and 630 nm and at atmospherically relevant pressure.

Authors:  Ryan Thalman; Rainer Volkamer
Journal:  Phys Chem Chem Phys       Date:  2013-10-07       Impact factor: 3.676

4.  Observing atmospheric formaldehyde (HCHO) from space: validation and intercomparison of six retrievals from four satellites (OMI, GOME2A, GOME2B, OMPS) with SEAC4RS aircraft observations over the Southeast US.

Authors:  Lei Zhu; Daniel J Jacob; Patrick S Kim; Jenny A Fisher; Karen Yu; Katherine R Travis; Loretta J Mickley; Robert M Yantosca; Melissa P Sulprizio; Isabelle De Smedt; Gonzalo Gonzalez Abad; Kelly Chance; Can Li; Richard Ferrare; Alan Fried; Johnathan W Hair; Thomas F Hanisco; Dirk Richter; Amy Jo Scarino; James Walega; Petter Weibring; Glenn M Wolfe
Journal:  Atmos Chem Phys       Date:  2016-11-01       Impact factor: 6.133

  4 in total
  1 in total

1.  The Korea-United States Air Quality (KORUS-AQ) field study.

Authors:  James H Crawford; Joon-Young Ahn; Jassim Al-Saadi; Limseok Chang; Louisa K Emmons; Jhoon Kim; Gangwoong Lee; Jeong-Hoo Park; Rokjin J Park; Jung Hun Woo; Chang-Keun Song; Ji-Hyung Hong; You-Deog Hong; Barry L Lefer; Meehye Lee; Taehyoung Lee; Saewung Kim; Kyung-Eun Min; Seong Soo Yum; Hye Jung Shin; Young-Woo Kim; Jin-Soo Choi; Jin-Soo Park; James J Szykman; Russell W Long; Carolyn E Jordan; Isobel J Simpson; Alan Fried; Jack E Dibb; SeogYeon Cho; Yong Pyo Kim
Journal:  Elementa (Wash D C)       Date:  2021-05-12       Impact factor: 6.053

  1 in total

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