An in-situ sensor technology for simultaneous spectrophotometric measurements of seawater total dissolved inorganic carbon and pH

Date created: 12 June 2019

A new, in-situ sensing system, Channelized Optical System (CHANOS), was recently developed to make high-resolution, simultaneous measurements of total dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and pH in seawater. Measurements made by this single, compact sensor can fully characterize the marine carbonate system. The system has a modular design to accommodate two independent, but similar measurement channels for DIC and pH. Both are based on spectrophotometric detection of hydrogen ion concentrations. The pH channel uses a flow-through, sample-indicator mixing design to achieve near instantaneous measurements. The DIC channel adapts a recently developed spectrophotometric method to achieve flow-through CO2 equilibration between an acidified sample and an indicator solution with a response time of only ̃90s. During laboratory and in-situ testing, CHANOS achieved a precision of ±0.0010 and ±2.5 µmol kg-1 for pH and DIC, respectively. In-situ comparison tests indicated that the accuracies of the pH and DIC channels over a three-week time-series deployment were ±0.0024 and ±4.1 µmol kg-1, respectively. This study demonstrates that CHANOS can make in-situ, climatology-quality measurements by measuring two desirable CO2 parameters, and is capable of resolving the CO2 system in dynamic marine environments.

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Identifier
Issued 2019-06-12T12:18:29.376132
Modified 2019-06-12T12:22:40.965863
DCAT Type Text
Source http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/es504893n
Contact Name
  • Wang Z A
  • Sonnichsen F N
  • Bradley A M
  • Hoering K A
  • Lanagan T M
  • Chu S N
  • Hammar T R
  • Camilli R