Atmospheric Measurement Techniques (May 2010)

Measurement of Ozone Production Sensor

  • M. Cazorla,
  • W. H. Brune

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-3-545-2010
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 3
pp. 545 – 555

Abstract

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A new ambient air monitor, the Measurement of Ozone Production Sensor (MOPS), measures directly the rate of ozone production in the atmosphere. The sensor consists of two 11.3 L environmental chambers made of UV-transmitting Teflon film, a unit to convert NO<sub>2</sub> to O<sub>3</sub>, and a modified ozone monitor. In the sample chamber, flowing ambient air is exposed to the sunlight so that ozone is produced just as it is in the atmosphere. In the second chamber, called the reference chamber, a UV-blocking film over the Teflon film prevents ozone formation but allows other processes to occur as they do in the sample chamber. The air flows that exit the two chambers are sampled by an ozone monitor operating in differential mode so that the difference between the two ozone signals, divided by the exposure time in the chambers, gives the ozone production rate. High-efficiency conversion of NO<sub>2</sub> to O<sub>3</sub> prior to detection in the ozone monitor accounts for differences in the NO<sub>x</sub> photostationary state that can occur in the two chambers. The MOPS measures the ozone production rate, but with the addition of NO to the sampled air flow, the MOPS can be used to study the sensitivity of ozone production to NO. Preliminary studies with the MOPS on the campus of the Pennsylvania State University show the potential of this new technique.