Atmospheric Measurement Techniques (May 2016)

An optical particle size spectrometer for aircraft-borne measurements in IAGOS-CARIBIC

  • M. Hermann,
  • A. Weigelt,
  • D. Assmann,
  • S. Pfeifer,
  • T. Müller,
  • T. Conrath,
  • J. Voigtländer,
  • J. Heintzenberg,
  • A. Wiedensohler,
  • B. G. Martinsson,
  • T. Deshler,
  • C. A. M. Brenninkmeijer,
  • A. Zahn

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-9-2179-2016
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 5
pp. 2179 – 2194

Abstract

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The particle number size distribution is an important parameter to characterize the atmospheric aerosol and its influence on the Earth's climate. Here we describe a new optical particle size spectrometer (OPSS) for measurements of the accumulation mode particle number size distribution in the tropopause region on board a passenger aircraft (IAGOS-CARIBIC observatory: In-service Aircraft for a Global Observing System – Civil Aircraft for Regular Investigation of the Atmosphere Based on an Instrument Container). A modified KS93 particle sensor from RION Co., Ltd., together with a new airflow system and a dedicated data acquisition system, is the key component of the CARIBIC OPSS. The instrument records individual particle pulse signal curves in the particle size range 130–1110 nm diameter (for a particle refractive index of 1.47-i0.006) together with a time stamp and thus allows the post-flight choice of the time resolution and the size distribution bin width. The CARIBIC OPSS has a 50 % particle detection diameter of 152 nm and a maximum asymptotic counting efficiency of 98 %. The instrument's measurement performance shows no pressure dependency and no particle coincidence for free tropospheric conditions. The size response function of the CARIBIC OPSS was obtained by a polystyrene latex calibration in combination with model calculations. Particle number size distributions measured with the new OPSS in the lowermost stratosphere agreed within a factor of 2 in concentration with balloon-borne measurements over western North America. Since June 2010 the CARIBIC OPSS is deployed once per month in the IAGOS-CARIBIC observatory.