Modification of the relaxed eddy accumulation technique to maximize measured scalar mixing ratio differences in updrafts and downdrafts — D. R. Bowling (1999) | RDL Network
Modification of the relaxed eddy accumulation technique to maximize measured scalar mixing ratio differences in updrafts and downdrafts
Article 1999 en
Authors
DB
D. R. Bowling
AD
A. C. Delany
AT
Andrew A. Turnipseed
Abstract
1 min read
A modification to the relaxed eddy accumulation (REA) flux measurement technique is proposed which maximizes the scalar mixing ratio difference in updrafts and downdrafts. This technique was developed with the goal of measuring the stable isotope ( 13 C/ 12 C and 18 O/ 16 O) ratios of updraft and downdraft air and thus the net fluxes of 13 C 16 O 2 and 12 C 18 O 16 O. Current mass spectrometer precision is small relative to measured isotopic gradients in CO 2 in the Earth's boundary layer, and the conventional REA approach is likely to be ineffective. The new technique, which we refer to as hyperbolic relaxed eddy accumulation (HREA), uses the conditional sampling concept of hyperbolic hole analysis to control sampling of air during only those turbulent events which contribute most strongly to the flux. Instead of basing updraft/downdraft sampling decisions strictly on vertical wind velocity, CO 2 mixing ratio ([CO 2 ]) fluctuations or those of another scalar are also used. Simulations using 10‐Hz data show that a wind‐based/scalar‐based sampling threshold can achieve a factor of 2.7 increase in scalar updraft/downdraft [CO 2 ] differences over simple REA. During midday periods with strong photosynthetic fluxes, up/down [CO 2 ] differences with HREA of 8–10 ppm are possible, compared with 3–5 ppm for the best conventional REA case. Corresponding isotopic differences can likely be resolved with current mass spectrometers using this approach.
Alex Guenther, William M. Baugh, Ken Davis, Gary A. Hampton, P. C. Harley, Lee F. Klinger, Lee A. Vierling, P. R. Zimmerman, E. Allwine, Steve Dilts, Brian Lamb, Hal Westberg, Dennis Baldocchi, Chris Geron, Thomas Pierce
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.