Best practices for autonomous measurement of seawater pH with the Honeywell Durafet.
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Date
2014Author
Bresnahan Jr., Philip J.
Martz, Todd R.
Takeshita, Yuichiroa
Johnson, Kenneth S
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Show full item recordAbstract
Performance of autonomous pH sensors is evaluated by comparing
in situ data to independent bench-top measurements of pH and
to co-located pH, O2, and pCO2 sensors. While the best practice is
always to deploy a properly calibrated sensor, the lengthy time period
required for sensor conditioning and calibration often results
in sensor deployment without comprehensive calibration. Quality
control (QC) procedures are examined to determine the errors associated with different in situ calibration approaches and lay a
framework for best practices. Sensor packages employing the Honeywell
Durafet remained stable across multiple deployments for
over nine months. However, sensor performance was often limited
by biofouling. Regional empirical relationships for estimating
carbonate system parameters are shown to enable identification
of otherwise indistinguishable sensor offset and drift when multiple
sensor types are co-located. Uncertainty is determined by calibration
approach and m.....
Journal
Methods in OceanographyVolume
9Page Range
pp.44-60Document Language
enMaturity Level
TRL 8 Actual system completed and "mission qualified" through test and demonstration in an operational environment (ground or space)Best Practice Type
Best PracticeGuide
DOI Original
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.mio.2014.08.003Citation
Bresnahan Jr., P.J.; Martza,T. R.; Takeshita, Y.; Johnson, K.S. and La Shomba, M. (2014) Best practices for autonomous measurement of seawater pH with the Honeywell Durafet. Methods in Oceanography, 9, pp.44-60. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.mio.2014.08.003Collections
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