Description of Particle Soot Absorption Photometer
(PSAP)
General Information
The Particle Soot/Absorption Photometer (PSAP) is used to measure in near
real time the light absorption coefficient. The method is based on the integrating
plate technique in which the change in optical transmission of a filter caused
by particle deposition on the filter is related to the light absorption coefficient
of the deposited particles using Beers Law.
Beers Law is given by:
  A=ln(Io/I)

where
A is the absorbance - how much light was absorbed while passing through the
filter
I is the intensity of light transmitted
Io is the original intensity of light before passing through the
filter.
Calculation of absorption coefficient is based on the change in filter transmission
(I/Io) for a given volume of sample air. Without correcting for filter
type and loading, the absorption coefficient is:
  bap = (area/volume)ln(Io/I)
where
bap is the absorption coefficient [m-1]
Area is the area of the sample spot [m2] - different for each instrument
volume is the volume of air sampled in averaging period [m3]
I is the average filter transmittance for averaging period, j+1
Io is the average filter transmittance for averaging period, j.
With correction for filter nonlinearity (loading+filter characteristics?) the
corrected absorption coefficient is:
  bap,corr = bap f(Tr)
where f(Tr) is the transfer function based on filter loading (Tr) for Pallflex
filters. The transfer function is incorporated in the software.
In order to ensure that the observed change in filter transmittance is not
due to changes in the intensity of the LED light source, a second filter is
used as a reference. This reference filter is adjacent to the primary filter.
The particle laden airstream first passes through the primary filter which
removes the particles and then the clean airstream passes through the reference
filter.
Corrections to PSAP measurements
We make several corrections to the PSAP measurements to obtain our final value
for absorption coefficient. These corrections are described in detail Bond et
al., (1999) but are briefly mentioned here.
Spot size correction - each PSAP instrument has a slightly different spot
area due to differences in machining of the the filter holder.
Scattering aerosol correction - the aerosol collected on the filter will also
scatter light which is observed as a lowering of transmittance of the filter.
Transmittance threshholds - transmittances values below 0.5 are considered
invalid, transmittance values below 0.7 are flagged as possibly suspect.
The PSAP flow meter is calibrated with a primary flow standard
The calibrations are referenced to 550 nm for consistency with the nephelometer
green wavelength.
Measurement Uncertainties
These values are from Bond et al. (1999), and are reported at 95% confidence
Flow rate calibration - typically less than 2%
Spot size correction - typically less than 2%
Response to scattering ~2%
Response to absorption ~22%
Instrument precision (unit-to-unit variability) < 6%
Total estimated uncertainty of PSAP measurement at 60 s averaging time and
typical atmospheric absorption levels ~15%
References
Bond,T.C., Anderson, T.L., Campbell, D.,"Calibration and intercomparison of
filter-based measurements of visible light absorption by aerosols," Aerosol
Science and Technology, vol. 30, pp582-600, 1999.