Abstract
Twenty-eight radiochemical 14C tracer measurement of tropospheric hydroxyl radical (OH) concentrations were obtained at a rural site near Washington State University, Pullman, WA (117°W, 47°N). Diurnal OH concentration variations were observed for the five days between 9 August and 14 August 1990. These data made it possible to estimate the midday precision and detection limit of the radiochemical OH measurement method. Experiments performed at a peak O 3 photolysis rate J (O( 1D)) of (3.0±0.2) × 10 −5 s −1 yielded a mean midday OH concentration of (5.6±0.1 (1 σ)) × 10 6 cm −3. Other data put an upper bound of 16% on fluctuations of instrument sensitivity. Low-light or nighttime background OH concentrations were less than (2.6±2) × 10 5 cm −3. A lower detection limit of 10 5 cm −3 was obtained when extra care was taken with the low-level 14C counting procedure.
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