Catalytic oxidation of H 2 on platinum: A robust method for generating low mixing ratio H 2O standards

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Abstract

Standard reference samples of water vapor suitable for in situ calibration of atmospheric hygrometers are not currently widespread, leading to difficulties in unifying the calibrations of these hygrometers and potentially contributing to observed measurement discrepancies. We describe and evaluate a system for reliably and quantitatively converting mixtures of H 2 in air to H 2O on a heated platinum surface, providing a compact, portable, adjustable source of water vapor. The technique is shown to be accurate and can be used to easily and reliably produce a wide range of water vapor concentrations (≈1 ppm -2%) on demand. The result is a H 2O standard that is expected to be suitable for in situ calibration of aircraft hygrometers, with an accuracy nearly that of the available H 2 standards (≈±2%). © Author(s) 2011.

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Rollins, A. W., Thornberry, T. D., Gao, R. S., Hall, B. D., & Fahey, D. W. (2011). Catalytic oxidation of H 2 on platinum: A robust method for generating low mixing ratio H 2O standards. Atmospheric Measurement Techniques, 4(10), 2059–2064. https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-4-2059-2011

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