Publication | Closed Access
Atmospheric CH_4 and N_2O measurements near Greater Houston area landfills using a QCL-based QEPAS sensor system during DISCOVER-AQ 2013
63
Citations
18
References
2014
Year
Environmental MonitoringEngineeringAir Pollution MeasurementAtmospheric PhotochemistryGas SensorAir QualitySource ApportionmentDiscover-aq 2013Absorption SpectroscopyPollution MonitoringN_2o MeasurementsEarth ScienceEnvironmental ChemistryChemical EngineeringPollution DetectionAtmospheric ScienceOptical DiagnosticsAtmospheric Ch_4Chemical EmissionHarris CountyWaste Disposal TrucksQepas-based SensorGas DetectionOptical SensorsEnvironmental EngineeringSpectroscopyAir Pollution
A quartz-enhanced photoacoustic absorption spectroscopy (QEPAS)-based gas sensor was developed for methane (CH₄) and nitrous-oxide (N₂O) detection. The QEPAS-based sensor was installed in a mobile laboratory operated by Aerodyne Research, Inc. to perform atmospheric CH₄ and N₂O detection around two urban waste-disposal sites located in the northeastern part of the Greater Houston area, during DISCOVER-AQ, a NASA Earth Venture during September 2013. A continuous wave, thermoelectrically cooled, 158 mW distributed feedback quantum cascade laser emitting at 7.83 μm was used as the excitation source in the QEPAS gas sensor system. Compared to typical ambient atmospheric mixing ratios of CH₄ and N₂O of 1.8 ppmv and 323 ppbv, respectively, significant increases in mixing ratios were observed when the mobile laboratory was circling two waste-disposal sites in Harris County and when waste disposal trucks were encountered.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1