Science Inventory

LONG PATH DIFFERENTIAL OPTICAL ABSORPTION SPECTROMETER AND EPA-APPROVED FIXED POINT METHODS INTERCOMPARISON

Citation:

Stevens, R., R. Drago, AND Y. Mamane. LONG PATH DIFFERENTIAL OPTICAL ABSORPTION SPECTROMETER AND EPA-APPROVED FIXED POINT METHODS INTERCOMPARISON. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, D.C., EPA/600/J-93/466 (NTIS PB94113099).

Description:

Differential optical absorption spectrometry (DOAS) has been used by a number of investigators over the past 10 years to measure a wide range of gaseous air pollutants. ecently OPSIS AB, Lund, Sweden, has developed and made commercially available DOAS instrument that has a number of features which make the unit attractive for field monitoring studies in both remote and urban areas. he DOAS is composed of a broadband light source (emission between 200 and 1000 nm) and a receiver-spectrometer assembly. he spectral data from the spectrometer are processed in real time using a PC computer to calculate the concentrations of the pollutants programmed to be monitored by the system. he distance between the light source and receiver can range from 100 m to 2,000 m, depending on the pollutant to be monitored and species concentrations. n September and October of 1989, an OPSIS AB DOAS was operated in the Research Triangle Park, NC on the roofs of the two main EPA laboratories. he distance between the light source and receiver was 557 m and the pollutants monitored were SO2, NO2, 3, HCHO and HNO2. omparisons between the federal reference and equivalent fixed-point methods measuring SO2, O3, and NO2 and simultaneous data derived from the DOAS had correlations typically-greater than-0.90 during the evaluation.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( REPORT )
Product Published Date:05/24/2002
Record Last Revised:12/10/2002
Record ID: 36021