Aerosol Chemical Characteristion on Board the Doe g1 Aircraft Using a Particle Into Liquid Sampler During the Texaqs 2000 Experiment. (open access)

Aerosol Chemical Characteristion on Board the Doe g1 Aircraft Using a Particle Into Liquid Sampler During the Texaqs 2000 Experiment.

Knowledge of aerosol chemical composition is key to understanding a number of properties of ambient aerosol particles including sources, size/number distribution, chemical evolution, optical properties and human health effects. Although filter based techniques have been widely used to determine aerosol chemical constituents, they generally cannot provide sufficiently fast time resolution needed to investigate sources and chemical evolution that effect aerosol chemical, size and number changes. In order to gain an ability to describe and predict the life cycles of ambient aerosols as a basis for ambient air quality control, fast and sensitive determination of the aerosol chemical composition must be made available. To help to achieve this goal, we deployed a newly developed technique, referred to as PILS (particle-into-liquid-sampler), on the DOE G1 aircraft during the 2000 Texas Air Quality Study (TexAQS 2000) to characterize the major ionic species of aerosol particles with aerodynamic size smaller than 2.5 {micro}m (PM 2.5). The results obtained are examined in the context of other simultaneously collected data for insights into the measurement capability of the PILS system.
Date: January 13, 2001
Creator: Lee,Y. N.; Song, Z.; Liu, Y.; Daum, P.; Weber, R.; Orsini, D. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aerosol Chemical Characteristion on Board the Doe g1 Aircraft Using a Particle Into Liquid Sampler During the Texaqs 2000 Experiment. (open access)

Aerosol Chemical Characteristion on Board the Doe g1 Aircraft Using a Particle Into Liquid Sampler During the Texaqs 2000 Experiment.

Knowledge of aerosol chemical composition is key to understanding a number of properties of ambient aerosol particles including sources, size/number distribution, chemical evolution, optical properties and human health effects. Although filter based techniques have been widely used to determine aerosol chemical constituents, they generally cannot provide sufficiently fast time resolution needed to investigate sources and chemical evolution that effect aerosol chemical, size and number changes. In order to gain an ability to describe and predict the life cycles of ambient aerosols as a basis for ambient air quality control, fast and sensitive determination of the aerosol chemical composition must be made available. To help to achieve this goal, we deployed a newly developed technique, referred to as PILS (particle-into-liquid-sampler), on the DOE G1 aircraft during the 2000 Texas Air Quality Study (TexAQS 2000) to characterize the major ionic species of aerosol particles with aerodynamic size smaller than 2.5 {micro}m (PM 2.5). The results obtained are examined in the context of other simultaneously collected data for insights into the measurement capability of the PILS system.
Date: January 13, 2001
Creator: Lee,Y. N.; Song, Z.; Liu, Y.; Daum, P.; Weber, R.; Orsini, D. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration's FY2001 Budget Request and FY2001-FY2002 Authorization: Description and Analysis (open access)

The National Aeronautics and Space Administration's FY2001 Budget Request and FY2001-FY2002 Authorization: Description and Analysis

None
Date: January 13, 2001
Creator: Rowberg, Richard E. & Hatch, Erin C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library