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Applications of cryogenic method to water vapor sampling from ambient air for isotopes analysis

Cited 0 time in wos
Cited 3 time in scopus
Title
Applications of cryogenic method to water vapor sampling from ambient air for isotopes analysis
Authors
Kim, Songyi
Han, Yeongcheol
Hur, Soon Do
Lee, Jeonghoon
Subject
Oceanography
Keywords
Water stable isotopeCryogenic sampling deviceSerial connectionCross-validation
Issue Date
2016
Citation
Kim, Songyi, et al. 2016. "Applications of cryogenic method to water vapor sampling from ambient air for isotopes analysis". Ocean and Polar Research, 38(4): 339-345.
Abstract
Stable water vapor isotopes have been utilized as a tracer for studying atmospheric global circulations, climate change and paleoclimate with ice cores. Recently, since laser spectroscopy has been available, water vapor isotopes can be measured more precisely and continuously. Studies of water vapor isotopes have been conducted over the world, but it is the early stage in south Korea. For vapor isotopes study, a cryogenic sampling device for water vapor isotopes has been developed. The cryogenic sampling device consists of the dewar bottle, filled with extremely low temperature material and impinger connected with a vacuum pump. Impinger stays put in the dewar bottle to change the water vapor which passes through the inside of impinger into the solid phase as ice. The fact that water vapor has not sampled completely leads to isotopic fractionation in the impinger. To minimize the isotopic fractionation during sampling water vapor, we have tested the method using a serial connection with two sets of impinger device in the laboratory. We trapped 98.02% of water vapor in the first trap and the isotopic difference of the trapped water vapor between two impinger were about 20‰ and 6‰ for hydrogen and oxygen, respectively. Considering the amount of water vapor trapped in each impinger, the isotopic differences for hydrogen and oxygen were 0.33‰ and 0.06‰, respectively, which is significantly smaller than the precision of isotopic measurements. This work can conclude that there is no significant fractionation during water vapor trapping.
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.4217/OPR.2016.38.4.339
Type
Article
Appears in Collections  
2014-2016, Investigation of Climate Change Mechanism by Observation and Simulation of Polar Climate for The Past and Present (14-16) / Kim, Seong-Joong (PE14010; PE15010; PE16010)
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