Theory of operation

Relating absorption to concentration

The scaling law of Jaimeson et. al., (1963) shows the effect of pressure on infrared absorption. If the amount of absorber of some gas ui (mol m-2) and absorption in a band are related by some function hi(), then

11‑1

The subscript i denotes a particular (ith) gas. Pressure is denoted as Pei because it is the equivalent pressure for the ith gas. Equivalent pressure is potentially different from total pressure P if there are gases present other than i that affect how the ith gas absorbs radiation.

We rewrite this in terms of number density (mol m-3) by introducing a path length λ, and noting that ui = ρiλ. Substituting this into equation 11‑1, and solving for the number density ρi of gas i yield

11‑2

We rewrite equation 11‑2 as

11‑3

by combining λ and the inverse h() functions into a new function fi(). The calibration function fi() is generated by measuring a range of known densities ρi and fitting a curve to ρi/Pei plotted against αi/Pei. Since gas standards are not available in “known densities”, the ρi values are computed from known concentrations mi (moles of gas per mole of air) using the ideal gas law

11‑4

Measuring absorptance

Given a source with radiant power F, and a detector some distance away, in the absence of reflection, absorptance by gas i can be determined from

11‑5

where is transmittance through gas i, is transmitted radiant power in the absorption band with some concentration of gas i present, and is the transmitted radiant power in the absorption band with zero concentration of i present. The instrument approximates absorptance by

11‑6

where Ai is the power received from the source in an absorbing wavelength for gas i, and Aio is the power received from the source in a reference wavelength that does not absorb gas i. The instrument measures Ai and Aio alternately 150 times per second.

If we combine equations 11‑6 and 11‑3, we can write the full equation for computing molar density from absorptance.

11‑7

Note the zeroing term zi and the span adjustment term Si in equation 11‑7. The span adjustment term is a linear function of absorptance (see What actually happens):

11‑8

Cross sensitivity

Because the instrument uses one detector for measuring Ac, Aco, Aw, and Awo, (the absorbed and non-absorbed power for CO2 and H2O, respectively), there is a slight cross-sensitivity between gases due to imperfections in the detector's frequency (time) response. This varies from detector to detector, but is measured during calibration, and is corrected in software. Equation 11‑6 is written as

11‑9

where Xji is the cross sensitivity response of gas j on gas i (determined during calibration), and Aj and Ajo are the absorbed and non-absorbed power for gas j. Equation 11‑7 becomes

11‑10

Zero drift

Even though the detector and filters are temperature controlled in the LI-7200/RS, the detector is subject to slight temperature drift as ambient temperature changes. This error is directly related to the detector cooler control voltage, which is measured, and thus provides a mechanism for a software "fine tuning".

The zero term zi is computed from

11‑11

where Tblock is the reference temperature for the Tair thermocouples in the sensor head (°C), Zi is the slope of the relationship between Tblock and zi (determined during calibration), and Zio is the zero factor determined when setting the zero.

Equation summary

H2O

In the atmosphere, the absorption of radiation by water vapor is not significantly influenced by any other gas, so the effective pressure for water vapor Pew is simply the total pressure P.

11‑12

H2O absorptance, aw, is

11‑13

where b1, b2, and b3 are constants (CO2 SD1, SD2, and SD3 on the calibration sheet) and Vc is cooler voltage. Uncorrected absorptance, α*w, is given by

11‑14

where Aw and Awo are the raw signals for the water absorption and reference bands, Xcw is the cross sensitivity factor for CO2 on water vapor (H2O XS on the calibration sheet), Ac and Aco are raw signals from the CO2 absorption and reference bands, Zwo is the zeroing coefficient (H2O Zero on the calibration sheet), and Zw is the zero drift coefficient (H2O Z on the calibration sheet), Ac and Aco are the raw signals for the CO2 absorption and reference bands, and Tblock is the block temperature.

Mole density of H2O, ρw, is given by

11‑15

The coefficients for the 3rd order polynomial fw( ) are given on the calibration sheet. The polynomial has the form Ax + Bx2 + Cx3, where x = ɑwSw/P. Sw is the span for water vapor.

CO2

The absorption of radiation by CO2 molecules is influenced by several other gases, including O2 and H2O. Since the concentration of H2O is most variable, it must be accounted for in the equivalent pressure of Pec. A method of doing this (LI-COR Application Note #116) is

11‑16 .

P is pressure, αw is the band broadening coefficient, and mw is the mole fraction of water vapor. Mole density of H2O is given by

CO2 Absorptance, αc, is given by

11‑17

where b1, b2, and b3 are constants (H2O SD1, SD2, and SD3 on the calibration sheet) and Vc is cooler voltage. Uncorrected absorptance, α*c, is given by

11‑18

where Ac and Aco are raw signals from the CO2 absorption and reference bands, Xwc is the cross sensitivity coefficient for water on CO2 (CO2 XS on the calibration sheet), Aw and Awo are the raw signals for the water absorption and reference bands, Zco is the zeroing parameter (CO2 Zero), Zc is the temperature drift coefficient (CO2 Z on the calibration sheet), and Tblock is the block temperature.

Mole density of CO2, ρc, is given by

11‑19

The coefficients for the 5th order polynomial fc( ) are given on the calibration sheet. The polynomial has the form Ax + Bx2 + Cx3 + Dx4 + Ex5, where x = αcSc/Pec. Sc is the span parameter for CO2 and Pec is equivalent pressure, and is the span-drift corrected absorptance for CO2.

The value the LI-7550 needs to output for CO2 absorptance is αw (equation 11‑17), and for H2O absorptance is (equation 11‑13). The span drift correction, implemented in this manner, should leave the span setting algorithms unchanged.

LI-7200RS implementation

Air pressure, Pg, (kPa) and temperature, Tg, (°C) are measured in the sampling cell (see A note about pressure and temperature). Wf is the mole fraction of water vapor, and .

Table 11‑1. Fundamental equations used in the LI-7200RS calculations.
Label Description Equation
H2O mmol/m3 H2O number density

11‑20

H2O g/m3 H2O mass density

11‑21

H2O mmol/mol H2O mole fraction

11‑22

H2O dry mmol/mol H2O dry mole fraction

11‑23

Dew Point (°C) Dew point temperature

11‑24

11‑25

CO2 mmol/m3 CO2 number density

11‑26

CO2 mg/m3 CO2 mass density

11‑27

CO2 µmol/mol CO2 mole fraction

11‑28

CO2 dry µmol/mol CO2 dry mole fraction

11‑29

A note about pressure and temperature

Since the instrument is calibrated for number density, accurate temperature is not required for the calculation, and accurate pressure measurement is not required, either (equations 11‑20 and 11‑26). For example, if you introduce a 1% error in the pressure sensor on a perfectly calibrated instrument, the resulting CO2 mole density error would be about 0.25%, and the H2O mole density error about 0.5% in typical ambient conditions.

Optical cell temperature is measured by fine wire temperature thermocouples located in the air inlet and outlet ports that measure the air temperature of incoming and outgoing air. The cell temperature reported is a weighted average of Tin and Tout, where

11‑30Tcell = 0.2Tin + 0.8Tout

at a flow rate of 12-17 lpm. In the event that one of the thermocouples (Tin or Tout) should fail, the instrument will automatically ignore output from the broken thermocouple and use only the functioning thermocouple to compute Tcell.

Pressure is measured by sampling an absolute pressure sensor in the LI-7550 (Box Pressure, kPa) and a fast differential pressure sensor in the sensor head (Head Pressure, kPa). The two pressure measurements are summed together to get ambient pressure in the optical cell (Total Pressure, kPa).

When calibrating (specifically when setting spans), temperature and pressure are more important. Calibrating with a 1% pressure error will cause the resulting CO2 mole density to have a 1% error, but no error in the resulting H2O mole density (because the water span target is computed from dew point, not mole fraction). A 1% error in temperature (3 °C) will cause a 1% error in both CO2 and H2O mole density.