The stability and calibration of water vapor isotope ratio measurements during long-term deployments

With the recent advent of commercial laser absorption spectrometers, field studies measuring stable isotope ratios of hydrogen and oxygen in water vapor have proliferated. These pioneering analyses have provided invaluable feedback about best strategies for optimizing instrumental accuracy, yet ques...

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Main Authors: Bailey, A., Noone, D., Berkelhammer, M., Steen-Larsen, H. C., Sato, P.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
unknown
Published: Copernicus Publications
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/kk91fq63p
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spelling ftoregonstate:ir.library.oregonstate.edu:kk91fq63p 2024-09-15T18:09:18+00:00 The stability and calibration of water vapor isotope ratio measurements during long-term deployments Bailey, A. Noone, D. Berkelhammer, M. Steen-Larsen, H. C. Sato, P. https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/kk91fq63p English [eng] eng unknown Copernicus Publications https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/kk91fq63p Attribution 3.0 United States Article ftoregonstate 2024-07-22T18:06:05Z With the recent advent of commercial laser absorption spectrometers, field studies measuring stable isotope ratios of hydrogen and oxygen in water vapor have proliferated. These pioneering analyses have provided invaluable feedback about best strategies for optimizing instrumental accuracy, yet questions still remain about instrument performance and calibration approaches for multi-year field deployments. With clear scientific potential for using these instruments to carry out long-term monitoring of the hydrological cycle, this study examines the long-term stability of the isotopic biases associated with three cavity-enhanced laser absorption spectrometers – calibrated with different systems and approaches – at two remote field sites: Mauna Loa Observatory, Hawaii, USA, and Greenland Environmental Observatory, Summit, Greenland. The analysis pays particular attention to the stability of measurement dependencies on water vapor concentration and also evaluates whether these so-called concentration-dependences are sensitive to statistical curve-fitting choices or measurement hysteresis. The results suggest evidence of monthly-to-seasonal concentration-dependence variability – which likely stems from low signal-to-noise at the humidity-range extremes – but no long-term directional drift. At Mauna Loa, where the isotopic analyzer is calibrated by injection of liquid water standards into a vaporizer, the largest source of inaccuracy in characterizing the concentration-dependence stems from an insufficient density of calibration points at low humidity. In comparison, at Greenland, the largest source of inaccuracy is measurement hysteresis associated with interactions between the reference vapor, generated by a custom dew point generator (DPG), and the sample tubing. Nevertheless, prediction errors associated with correcting the concentration-dependence are small compared to total measurement uncertainty. At both sites, a dominant source of uncertainty is instrumental precision at low humidity, which cannot be reduced ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Greenland ScholarsArchive@OSU (Oregon State University)
institution Open Polar
collection ScholarsArchive@OSU (Oregon State University)
op_collection_id ftoregonstate
language English
unknown
description With the recent advent of commercial laser absorption spectrometers, field studies measuring stable isotope ratios of hydrogen and oxygen in water vapor have proliferated. These pioneering analyses have provided invaluable feedback about best strategies for optimizing instrumental accuracy, yet questions still remain about instrument performance and calibration approaches for multi-year field deployments. With clear scientific potential for using these instruments to carry out long-term monitoring of the hydrological cycle, this study examines the long-term stability of the isotopic biases associated with three cavity-enhanced laser absorption spectrometers – calibrated with different systems and approaches – at two remote field sites: Mauna Loa Observatory, Hawaii, USA, and Greenland Environmental Observatory, Summit, Greenland. The analysis pays particular attention to the stability of measurement dependencies on water vapor concentration and also evaluates whether these so-called concentration-dependences are sensitive to statistical curve-fitting choices or measurement hysteresis. The results suggest evidence of monthly-to-seasonal concentration-dependence variability – which likely stems from low signal-to-noise at the humidity-range extremes – but no long-term directional drift. At Mauna Loa, where the isotopic analyzer is calibrated by injection of liquid water standards into a vaporizer, the largest source of inaccuracy in characterizing the concentration-dependence stems from an insufficient density of calibration points at low humidity. In comparison, at Greenland, the largest source of inaccuracy is measurement hysteresis associated with interactions between the reference vapor, generated by a custom dew point generator (DPG), and the sample tubing. Nevertheless, prediction errors associated with correcting the concentration-dependence are small compared to total measurement uncertainty. At both sites, a dominant source of uncertainty is instrumental precision at low humidity, which cannot be reduced ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Bailey, A.
Noone, D.
Berkelhammer, M.
Steen-Larsen, H. C.
Sato, P.
spellingShingle Bailey, A.
Noone, D.
Berkelhammer, M.
Steen-Larsen, H. C.
Sato, P.
The stability and calibration of water vapor isotope ratio measurements during long-term deployments
author_facet Bailey, A.
Noone, D.
Berkelhammer, M.
Steen-Larsen, H. C.
Sato, P.
author_sort Bailey, A.
title The stability and calibration of water vapor isotope ratio measurements during long-term deployments
title_short The stability and calibration of water vapor isotope ratio measurements during long-term deployments
title_full The stability and calibration of water vapor isotope ratio measurements during long-term deployments
title_fullStr The stability and calibration of water vapor isotope ratio measurements during long-term deployments
title_full_unstemmed The stability and calibration of water vapor isotope ratio measurements during long-term deployments
title_sort stability and calibration of water vapor isotope ratio measurements during long-term deployments
publisher Copernicus Publications
url https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/kk91fq63p
genre Greenland
genre_facet Greenland
op_relation https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/kk91fq63p
op_rights Attribution 3.0 United States
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