Atmospheric Measurement Techniques (Jun 2022)

A dual-wavelength photothermal aerosol absorption monitor: design, calibration and performance

  • L. Drinovec,
  • L. Drinovec,
  • L. Drinovec,
  • U. Jagodič,
  • U. Jagodič,
  • L. Pirker,
  • L. Pirker,
  • M. Škarabot,
  • M. Kurtjak,
  • K. Vidović,
  • L. Ferrero,
  • B. Visser,
  • J. Röhrbein,
  • E. Weingartner,
  • D. M. Kalbermatter,
  • K. Vasilatou,
  • T. Bühlmann,
  • C. Pascale,
  • T. Müller,
  • A. Wiedensohler,
  • G. Močnik,
  • G. Močnik,
  • G. Močnik

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-15-3805-2022
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15
pp. 3805 – 3825

Abstract

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There exists a lack of aerosol absorption measurement techniques with low uncertainties and without artefacts. We have developed the two-wavelength Photothermal Aerosol Absorption Monitor (PTAAM-2λ), which measures the aerosol absorption coefficient at 532 and 1064 nm. Here we describe its design, calibration and mode of operation and evaluate its applicability, limits and uncertainties. The 532 nm channel was calibrated with ∼ 1 µmol mol−1 NO2, whereas the 1064 nm channel was calibrated using measured size distribution spectra of nigrosin particles and a Mie calculation. Since the aerosolized nigrosin used for calibration was dry, we determined the imaginary part of the refractive index of nigrosin from the absorbance measurements on solid thin film samples. The obtained refractive index differed considerably from the one determined using aqueous nigrosin solution. PTAAM-2λ has no scattering artefact and features very low uncertainties: 4 % and 6 % for the absorption coefficient at 532 and 1064 nm, respectively, and 9 % for the absorption Ångström exponent. The artefact-free nature of the measurement method allowed us to investigate the artefacts of filter photometers. Both the Aethalometer AE33 and CLAP suffer from cross-sensitivity to scattering – this scattering artefact is most pronounced for particles smaller than 70 nm. We observed a strong dependence of the filter multiple scattering parameter on the particle size in the 100–500 nm range. The results from the winter ambient campaign in Ljubljana showed similar multiple scattering parameter values for ambient aerosols and laboratory experiments. The spectral dependence of this parameter resulted in AE33 reporting the absorption Ångström exponent for different soot samples with values biased 0.23–0.35 higher than the PTAAM-2λ measurement. Photothermal interferometry is a promising method for reference aerosol absorption measurements.