Virtual disjunct eddy covariance measurements of organic compound fluxes from a subalpine forest using proton transfer reaction mass spectrometry - Archive ouverte HAL Access content directly
Journal Articles Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics Year : 2002

Virtual disjunct eddy covariance measurements of organic compound fluxes from a subalpine forest using proton transfer reaction mass spectrometry

Abstract

A `virtual' disjunct eddy covariance (vDEC) device was tested with field measurements of biogenic VOC fluxes at a subalpine forest site in the Rocky Mountains of the USA. A PTR-MS instrument was used as the VOC sensor. Daily peak emission fluxes of 2-methyl-3-buten-2-ol (MBO), methanol, acetone and acetaldehyde were around 1.5, 1, 0.8 and 0.4 mg m-2 h-1, respectively. High pass filtering due to long sampling lines was investigated in laboratory experiments, and suggested that VOC losses in PTFA lines are generally governed by diffusion laws. Memory effects and surface reactions did not seem to play a dominant role. Model estimates of MBO fluxes compared well with measured fluxes. The results also suggest that latent heat and sensible heat fluxes are reasonably well correlated with VOC fluxes and could be used to predict variations in VOC emissions. The release of MBO, methanol, acetone and acetaldehyde resulted in significant change of tropospheric oxidant levels and a 10--40% increase in ozone levels, as inferred from a photochemical box model. We conclude that vDEC with a PTR-MS instrument is a versatile tool for simultaneous field analysis of multiple VOC fluxes.
Fichier principal
Vignette du fichier
acp-2-279-2002.pdf (2.14 Mo) Télécharger le fichier
Origin : Explicit agreement for this submission
Loading...

Dates and versions

hal-00295206 , version 1 (18-06-2008)

Identifiers

  • HAL Id : hal-00295206 , version 1

Cite

T. G. Karl, C. Spirig, J. Rinne, C. Stroud, P. Prevost, et al.. Virtual disjunct eddy covariance measurements of organic compound fluxes from a subalpine forest using proton transfer reaction mass spectrometry. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 2002, 2 (4), pp.279-291. ⟨hal-00295206⟩

Collections

INSU EGU
117 View
114 Download

Share

Gmail Facebook X LinkedIn More