Trip planning …

… is going well after a few problems at the start. After a few discussions and a missing permit we have abandoned the plan of going to Resolute and I will be going to Alert instead. This has several (scientific and logistical) advantages, e.g. a cleaner environment, cheaper transfer of scientific equipment. I will be carrying out VOC-in-snow measurements on site, because I will ship a GC-FID for SPME measurements on site.

I will be at Alert from May 16 to June 7 and measurements and sample collection will be made for snow and near surface air apart from standard ancillary measurements.

Digging for literature …

I currently do some more background work on available VOC data, mainly fluxes of organic compounds between the snow pack and the atmosphere. And there is … almost nothing. Surprisingly few articles have been published so far (there is much more data on inorganic species, though).

Other stuff concerns snow cover and snow depth measurements as well as residence time of the snow cover, depending on surface temperatures. And there is more on that – in fact there is lots (satellite data, ground data and model results). Most articles are available by just pressing a couple of buttons – some articles from less known journals I have to order, but that can be done online as well. Nice.

Midterm(s)

Today I have given my first exam – the midterm – in Instrumental Analysis. It was quite a challenge to put 2 equally difficult exams together, but I think it worked out in the end. After all, the content is not too difficult, but the challenge is rather to keep the different types of instrumentation in mind.The exams themselves were quite uneventful – although I have underestimated the time that it would take the students to answer the questions. I thought 1,5-2 hrs would be enough, but it took most of them the full 3 hours to get everything done.I now have a stack of papers waiting for me to mark them. I hope the weather is going to be bad next weekend. Next week there will be a couple of student presentations waiting for me and that will be enjoyable. The presentations are usually fairly good and I think most people find the feedback quite useful.

Upgrade to WordPress 2.0

I have upgraded my blogsoftware to version 2.0 and so far it seems to be working well. After a backup of the database and the scripts I have deleted/replaced the old files (following a rather elaborate how-to). Even my theme seems to be ok (after reactivating the necessary plugins). Thanks, Gregoa, for your prompt warning, when the RSS feed update failed during the update :)Looks alright for now!

Teaching in full swing …

It is now several weeks that I have started teaching “Instrumental Analysis 2” and I have to say that I really enjoy this 3rd year chemistry course. Preparation is really a lot of work (especially the first time!) that has kept me busy most weekends since Christmas, but I find the sessions themselves very rewarding. Apart from the lectures, I am also grading a formal presentation by students that should help them prepare for interview situations.They give a presentation on one of their lab experiments, reporting on the measurement principle, set-up, results and discussion. Questions are also part of the presentation. So far it’s been fun and presentations have been pretty well prepared. I not only give feedback on the scientific part, but also on the style of the presentation (slide design, voice, gestures, general impression).

ABC-01144-2005.R1 – Accepted

It took a while, but finally it is done. After circulating the draft, good reviews and some modifications, which consisted mostly of removing content, the first paper on my research will get published in Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry. Watch the “Online First” section for an online pre-release soon.

For the final version, we have condensed the article to the method presentation and removed results from filter and irradiation experiments that were not only fairly preliminary, but also a step ahead of the original method development. The article title is “Determination of a Wide Range of Volatile and Semivolatile Organic Compounds in Snow Using Solid Phase Micro-Extraction (SPME)” and this what it is about. We present qualitative data for numerous compounds in snow obtained from the headspace and liquid phases of a melted snow sample and quantitative data for 12 selected VOC in the lower [ร‚ยตg/L] range.

To our knowledge it is the first application of SPME for the determination of VOC in snow and has some remarkable advantages, such as suitability for field measurements and solvent-less application, which facilitates easy sample collection in remote and ecologically sensitive areas.

Teaching starts tomorrow

… and I got everything I need – almost ๐Ÿ˜‰ I will teach 2 lectures per week (Tue and Thu) so this can be managed nicely and I really like the content (Instrumental Analysis). Tomorrow’ s session will be mostly administrative (and also concerning the Lab course that I will be involved with to a limited extent), but on Thursday it will be down to business.

Planning my way to Resolute …

I have been to a meeting with some veteran Arctic researchers to inform myself about research opportunities in Resolute, NU. I would like to do some sampling and measurements there next spring (in April) and they have provided me with a lot of information on administrative stuff that has to be dealt with and some valuable information on sampling sites, contacts – everything is still in the infancy stage and I am not even sure, if it will work, but it doesn’t hurt to start planning ๐Ÿ˜‰ I have also started a draft with research objectives and methodologies – to get some structure in my thoughts.

More news to follow for sure!

American Geophysical Union (AGU) Fall Meeting

I am currently in San Francisco attending the AGU Fall meeting. And it is pretty amazing. 11,500 Earth Scientists coming together for a meeting. This is not only utterly overwhelming, but also a good opportunity for me to have a look outside my field and engage in discussions with other scientists. All provided that you are well prepared or you will find yourself staring helplessly into the 540 page program.

And I was quite well prepared – time on the plane helps ๐Ÿ˜‰ I have already presented my poster and I am very satisfied with the discussions. I have received some good feedback and was encouraged by several people to make measurements that are part of a larger campaign in order to put my data into perspective (… and I am working on that …). I have also participated in an OASIS meeting – a project that would like to be part of, one way or the other (http://www.oasishome.net/). There were quite a few sessions on atmosphere-snow interactions and I think that my research fits in well here.

Apart from research related sessions (I have mostly attended atmospheric, aerosol and cryosphere sessions) I have also attended sessions that deal with communication of scientists with the media and the general public, which I found quite interesting and partly somewhat controversial. Objectivity, translation of scientific results and communicating uncertainties (e.g. in models or measurements) – who should do the translating – scientists or policy advisors, were the core of this discussion. Furthermore, I am pretty busy writing up some stuff, which I didn’t have time for in the past weeks. Lot’s of work, but interesting and fun.

Some new results …

I have now data from all samples that I have collected in Montreal, Parc Tremblant and Mont Saint Hilaire. The latter two sampling spots were 2.5 hrs north and 40 min east of Montreal respectively. The profile of determined compounds is pretty anthropogenic with a lot of substituted benzenes (with some chlorinated compounds). A lot of aliphatic aldehydes (e.g. nonanal), alcohols and ketones (octanol. MEK) are also part of the mix.

What is interesting is that the large chunk of biogenic and halogenated compounds that I have detected in last year’s samples are not there, despite the significantly improved detection limit. Also, concentrations were 10-100x smaller. There could be a lot of reasons for his – sampling location, meteorological conditions, snow properties/age … and I will try to get an idea by using ancillary and snow properties data in order to shed some light on this issue, although I am not sure,if I will be successful.

I have also increased the number of compounds that I can now quantify – from 6 to 12, a nice step forward. I can now quantify most aromatic compounds; oxygenated compounds are next.