2015
DOI: 10.5194/amt-8-2801-2015
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An automatic collector to monitor insoluble atmospheric deposition: application for mineral dust deposition

Abstract: Abstract. Deposition is one of the key terms of the mineral dust cycle. However, dust deposition remains poorly constrained in transport models simulating the atmospheric dust cycle. This is mainly due to the limited number of relevant deposition measurements. This paper aims to present an automatic collector (CARAGA), specially developed to sample the total (dry and wet) atmospheric deposition of insoluble dust in remote areas. The autonomy of the CARAGA can range from 25 days to almost 1 year depending on th… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…Rinse water and rainwater pass through an AA Millipore ® cellulose ester filter with a 0.8 µm porosity in order to collect the insoluble fraction of the deposition. A complete description of the CARAGA collector and sampling network can be found in Laurent et al (2015) and Vincent et al (2016). After being brought back to the laboratory, collected filters were ashed following a progressive increase in temperature up to 550 • C in order to destroy and vaporize the filter and organic matters.…”
Section: Sampling Of Insoluble Deposition and Total Mass Measurementsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Rinse water and rainwater pass through an AA Millipore ® cellulose ester filter with a 0.8 µm porosity in order to collect the insoluble fraction of the deposition. A complete description of the CARAGA collector and sampling network can be found in Laurent et al (2015) and Vincent et al (2016). After being brought back to the laboratory, collected filters were ashed following a progressive increase in temperature up to 550 • C in order to destroy and vaporize the filter and organic matters.…”
Section: Sampling Of Insoluble Deposition and Total Mass Measurementsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…After being brought back to the laboratory, collected filters were ashed following a progressive increase in temperature up to 550 • C in order to destroy and vaporize the filter and organic matters. The mineral deposition mass, excluding volatile and organic matter, was estimated by weighing the ashed samples (Laurent et al, 2015), and the ashes were stored in acid-cleaned Eppendorf tubes.…”
Section: Sampling Of Insoluble Deposition and Total Mass Measurementsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Currently, there are very few stations measuring dust deposition, both in the vicinity of and far from source regions (e.g., Bergametti and Fôret, 2014). CARAGA (Laurent et al, 2015;Fu et al, 2017), which is a network of automatic deposition collectors installed throughout the western Mediterranean Basin, samples mass flux of atmospheric insoluble deposition weekly. This initial effort is focusing to constrain regional models of dust simulation but the potentiality of these low-cost and automatic instruments can also be used in remote and isolated regions such as the Sahara.…”
Section: User Requirements For Removal Processesmentioning
confidence: 99%