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European Geosciences Union, Geoscientific Instrumentation, Methods and Data Systems, 2(10), p. 245-255, 2021

DOI: 10.5194/gi-10-245-2021

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Intercomparison of photoacoustic and cavity attenuated phase shift instruments: laboratory calibration and field measurements

Journal article published in 2021 by Jialuo Zhang, Jun Chen ORCID, Meng Wang ORCID, Mingxu Su, Wu Zhou, Ravi Varma, Shengrong Lou ORCID
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

The study of aerosol optical properties is essential to understand its impact on the global climate. In our recent field measurement carried out in the Gehu area of southwest Changzhou City, a photoacoustic extinctiometer (PAX) and a cavity attenuated phase shift albedo monitor (CAPS-ALB) were used for online aerosol optical properties measurement. Laboratory calibration with gas and particle samples were carried out to correct disagreements of field measurements. During particle calibration, we adopted ammonium sulfate (AS) samples for scattering calibration of nephelometer parts of both the instruments, then combined these with number-size distribution measurements in the MIE model for calculating the value of the total scattering (extinction) coefficient. During gas calibration, we employed high concentrations of NO2 for absorption calibration of the PAX resonator and then further intercompared the extinction coefficient of CAPS-ALB with a cavity-enhanced spectrometer. The correction coefficient obtained from the laboratory calibration experiments was employed on the optical properties observed in the field measurements correspondingly and showed good results in comparison with reconstructed extinction from the IMPROVE model. The intercomparison of the calibrated optical properties of PAX and CAPS-ALB in field measurements was in good agreement with slopes of 1.052, 1.024 and 1.046 for extinction, scattering and absorption respectively, which shows the reliability of measurement results and verifies the correlation between the photoacoustic and the cavity attenuated phase shift instruments.