CAFE: A new, improved nonresonant laser-induced fluorescence instrument for airborne in situ measurement of formaldehyde

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Abstract

NASA Compact Airborne Formaldehyde Experiment (CAFE) is a nonresonant laser-induced fluorescence instrument for airborne in situ measurement of formaldehyde (HCHO). The instrument is described here with highlighted improvements from the predecessor instrument, COmpact Formaldehyde FluorescencE Experiment (COFFEE). CAFE uses a 480mW, 80 kHz laser at 355 nm to excite HCHO and detects the resulting fluorescence in the 420-550 nm range. The fluorescence is acquired at 5 ns resolution for 500 ns and the unique time profile of the HCHO fluorescence provides measurement selectivity. CAFE achieves a 1 precision of 160 pptv (1 s) and 90 pptv (10 s) for [HCHO]D0 pptv. The accuracy of CAFE, using its curve-fitting data processing, is estimated as 20% of [HCHO]C100 pptv. CAFE has successfully flown on multiple aircraft platforms and is particularly well-suited to high-altitude research aircraft or small air quality research aircraft where high sensitivity is required but operator interaction and instrument payload is limited.

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Clair, J. M. S., Swanson, A. K., Bailey, S. A., & Hanisco, T. F. (2019). CAFE: A new, improved nonresonant laser-induced fluorescence instrument for airborne in situ measurement of formaldehyde. Atmospheric Measurement Techniques, 12(8), 4581–4590. https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-12-4581-2019

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