On Aethalometer measurement uncertainties and an instrument correction factor for the Arctic
2017
Several types of filter-based instruments are used to estimate
aerosol light absorption coefficients. Two significant results are presented
based on Aethalometer measurements at six Arctic stations from 2012 to 2014.
First, an alternative method of post-processing the Aethalometer data is
presented, which reduces measurement noise and lowers the detection limit of
the instrument more effectively than boxcar averaging. The biggest benefit of
this approach can be achieved if instrument drift is minimised. Moreover, by
using an attenuation threshold criterion for data post-processing, the
relative uncertainty from the electronic noise of the instrument is kept
constant. This approach results in a time series with a variable collection
time (Δt) but with a constant relative uncertainty with regard to
electronic noise in the instrument. An additional advantage of this method is
that the detection limit of the instrument will be lowered at small aerosol
concentrations at the expense of temporal resolution, whereas there is little
to no loss in temporal resolution at high aerosol concentrations
( > 2.1–6.7 Mm−1 as measured by the Aethalometers). At high aerosol
concentrations, minimising the detection limit of the instrument is less
critical. Additionally, utilising co-located filter-based absorption photometers, a
correction factor is presented for the Arctic that can be used in
Aethalometer corrections available in literature. The correction factor of
3.45 was calculated for low-elevation Arctic stations. This correction factor
harmonises Aethalometer attenuation coefficients with light absorption
coefficients as measured by the co-located light absorption photometers.
Using one correction factor for Arctic Aethalometers has the advantage that
measurements between stations become more inter-comparable.
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