3 resultados para e-CRM

em ArchiMeD - Elektronische Publikationen der Universität Mainz - Alemanha


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Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit ist es gelungen, ein GC/ICP-MSIVA-Verfahren zur zuverlässigen und richtigen Bestimmung von Methylquecksilbergehalten (MeHg+) in aquatischen Systemen zu entwickeln. Unter Verwendung eines hergestellten Me201Hg+-Indikators konnte bei der Überprüfung der weltweit gängigen Probenaufbereitung mittels NaBEt4 zur Überführung von MeHg+ in MeEtHg gezeigt werden, daß während dieser Probenaufbereitung in Gegenwart von Halogeniden eine MeHg+-Speziesumwandlung zu Hg0 stattfinden kann. Es konnte mit Hilfe von Modellösungen erstmalig eindeutig nachgewiesen werden, daß die MeHg+-Speziesumwandlungen ihre Ursache nur im Zusammenwirken von vorliegenden Halogeniden mit dem verwendeten Derivatisierungsreagenz NaBEt4 haben. Ebenso wie in Modellösungen wurden auch MeHg+-Speziesumwandlungen in Realproben bei der Derivatisierung mit NaBEt4 überprüft. Die Proben, die bei der Derivatisierung mit NaBEt4 eine MeHg+-Umwandlung zeigten, wurden auch mit dem weltweit bisher wenig eingesetzten Reagenz NaBPr4 derivatisiert. Hier konnte bei keiner der Untersuchungen eine MeHg+-Umwandlung festgestellt werden. Des weiteren wurden MeHg+-Gehalte in Süßwasserproben unter Verwendung von NaBEt4 und NaBPr4 bestimmt. Die Ergebnisse hinsichtlich beider Derivatisierungsreagenzien stimmten sehr gut überein. Diese Resultate zeigten eindrucksvoll, daß Substanzverluste durch die Speziesumwandlung bei MeHg+-Bestimmungen mit MSIVA keine Rolle spielen, da die Umwandlung erst nach der Isotopenvermischung einsetzte. Mit dem entwickelten GC/ICP-MSIVA-Verfahrens wurde der MeHg+-Gehalt im Referenzmaterial CRM 463 analysiert, der sehr gut mit dem zertifizierten Wert übereinstimmte.

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Volatile organic compounds play a critical role in ozone formation and drive the chemistry of the atmosphere, together with OH radicals. The simplest volatile organic compound methane is a climatologically important greenhouse gas, and plays a key role in regulating water vapour in the stratosphere and hydroxyl radicals in the troposphere. The OH radical is the most important atmospheric oxidant and knowledge of the atmospheric OH sink, together with the OH source and ambient OH concentrations is essential for understanding the oxidative capacity of the atmosphere. Oceanic emission and / or uptake of methanol, acetone, acetaldehyde, isoprene and dimethyl sulphide (DMS) was characterized as a function of photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) and a suite of biological parameters, in a mesocosm experiment conducted in the Norwegian fjord. High frequency (ca. 1 minute-1) methane measurements were performed using a gas chromatograph - flame ionization detector (GC-FID) in the boreal forests of Finland and the tropical forests of Suriname. A new on-line method (Comparative Reactivity Method - CRM) was developed to directly measure the total OH reactivity (sink) of ambient air. It was observed that under conditions of high biological activity and a PAR of ~ 450 μmol photons m-2 s-1, the ocean acted as a net source of acetone. However, if either of these criteria was not fulfilled then the ocean acted as a net sink of acetone. This new insight into the biogeochemical cycling of acetone at the ocean-air interface has helped to resolve discrepancies from earlier works such as Jacob et al. (2002) who reported the ocean to be a net acetone source (27 Tg yr-1) and Marandino et al. (2005) who reported the ocean to be a net sink of acetone (- 48 Tg yr-1). The ocean acted as net source of isoprene, DMS and acetaldehyde but net sink of methanol. Based on these findings, it is recommended that compound specific PAR and biological dependency be used for estimating the influence of the global ocean on atmospheric VOC budgets. Methane was observed to accumulate within the nocturnal boundary layer, clearly indicating emissions from the forest ecosystems. There was a remarkable similarity in the time series of the boreal and tropical forest ecosystem. The average of the median mixing ratios during a typical diel cycle were 1.83 μmol mol-1 and 1.74 μmol mol-1 for the boreal forest ecosystem and tropical forest ecosystem respectively. A flux value of (3.62 ± 0.87) x 1011 molecules cm-2 s-1 (or 45.5 ± 11 Tg CH4 yr-1 for global boreal forest area) was derived, which highlights the importance of the boreal forest ecosystem for the global budget of methane (~ 600 Tg yr-1). The newly developed CRM technique has a dynamic range of ~ 4 s-1 to 300 s-1 and accuracy of ± 25 %. The system has been tested and calibrated with several single and mixed hydrocarbon standards showing excellent linearity and accountability with the reactivity of the standards. Field tests at an urban and forest site illustrate the promise of the new method. The results from this study have improved current understanding about VOC emissions and uptake from ocean and forest ecosystems. Moreover, a new technique for directly measuring the total OH reactivity of ambient air has been developed and validated, which will be a valuable addition to the existing suite of atmospheric measurement techniques.

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The biosphere emits copiously volatile organic compounds (VOCs) into the atmosphere, which are removed again depending on the oxidative capacity of the atmosphere and physical processes such as mixing, transport and deposition. Biogenic VOCs react with the primary oxidant of the atmosphere, the hydroxyl radical (OH), and potentially lead to the formation tropospheric ozone and aerosol, which impact regional climate and air quality. The rate of OH decay in the atmosphere, the total OH reactivity is a function of the atmospheric, reactive compound's concentration and reaction velocity with OH. One way to measure the total OH reactivity, the total OH sink, is with the Comparative Reactivity Method - CRM. Basically, the reaction of OH with a reagent (here pyrrole) in clean air and in the presence of atmospheric, reactive molecules is compared. This thesis presents measurements of the total OH reactivity at the biosphere-atmosphere interface to analyze various influences and driving forces. For measurements in natural environment the instrument was automated and a direct, undisturbed sampling method developed. Additionally, an alternative detection system was tested and compared to the originally used detector (Proton Transfer Reaction-Mass Spectrometer, PTR-MS). The GC-PID (Gas Chromatographic Photo-Ionization Detector) was found as a smaller, less expensive, and robust alternative for total OH reactivity measurements. The HUMPPA-COPEC 2010 measurement campaign in the Finish forest was impacted by normal boreal forest emissions as well as prolonged heat and biomass burning emissions. The measurement of total OH reactivity was compared with a comprehensive set of monitored individual species ambient concentration levels. A significant discrepancy between those individually measured OH sinks and the total OH reactivity was observed, which was characterized in detail by the comparison of within and above the forest canopy detected OH reactivity. Direct impact of biogenic emissions on total OH reactivity was examined on Kleiner Feldberg, Germany, 2011. Trans-seasonal measurements of an enclosed Norway spruce branch were conducted via PTR-MS, for individual compound's emission rates, and CRM, for total OH reactivity emission fluxes. Especially during summertime, the individually monitored OH sink terms could not account for the measured total OH reactivity. A controlled oxidation experiment in a low NOx environment was conducted in the EUPHORE reaction chamber (CHEERS, Spain 2011). The concentration levels of the reactant isoprene and its major products were monitored and compared to total OH reactivity measurements as well as to the results of two models. The individually measured compounds could account for the total OH reactivity during this experiment as well as the traditional model-degradation scheme for isoprene (MCM 3.2). Due to previous observations of high OH levels in the isoprene-rich environment of the tropics, a novel isoprene mechanism was recently suggested. In this mechanism (MIME v4) additional OH is generated during isoprene oxidation, which could not be verified in the conditions of the CHEERS experiment.