Wet chemical ozone measurements at Georg von Neumayer station, Antarctica, during 1982-1994

Ozone measurements began in 1982 at the Georg von Neumayer Station on the Ekstrom Ice Shelf in Antarctica and continued until 1996. The station was about 15 km from the ice edge. In the first year, a so-called trace substance observatory was set up 1.5 km south of the station by the University of He...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Winkler, Peter
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: PANGAEA 2022
Subjects:
GVN
Online Access:https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.942386
https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.942386
Description
Summary:Ozone measurements began in 1982 at the Georg von Neumayer Station on the Ekstrom Ice Shelf in Antarctica and continued until 1996. The station was about 15 km from the ice edge. In the first year, a so-called trace substance observatory was set up 1.5 km south of the station by the University of Heidelberg (Weller et al. 2007) in order to be able to take a wide variety of air-chemical samples. Some experience had to be gained under the extreme conditions. For some devices, frost settled in the air intake shaft. The ozone machine had its own Teflon suction line, which worked without any problems. The bubbler, on the other hand, was sensitive to direct sunlight, causing the display to change erratically. This was successfully prevented by a cardboard sunshade. An aerosol filter was installed at the outlet of the device in order to separate the solution droplets formed in the aerator so that aerosol measuring devices and in particular a particle counter was not disturbed. The ozone device also survived an emergency power operation during which the temperature in the trace substance observatory dropped to -22°C. In 1984/1985, the ozone device was not housed in the trace substance observatory, but directly in the station in a special trace substance laboratory. The intake line was moved to the outside in the exit chimney of the station. Height above ground was rather 1.5m instead of 2.5m at that time. The formation of a snow plug in the intake line initially cut off the air supply. In this way, experience in the operation of the device was gradually gained. In 1992, the Georg von Neumayer station was replaced by a new building about 10 km south-southwest of the first station. In January 1992, due to frequent trips between GvN and the new Neumayer-II building, the trace substance measurements were repeatedly disrupted, so that operations were temporarily suspended.