The gas sensorat station 5 was a

miniature, rapid-response, infrared
system prototype that we developed for DOE and modified
to detect methane.° It operates on
the principle of differential absorption of infrared radiation by various

gases. Onefilter allows infrared

radiation of a wavelength heavily
absorbed by methane to pass, and
another gives us an unabsorbed
wavelength. By comparing the intensities of the two beamsafter they
have passed through the gas, we
can calculate the methane concentration. The infrared sensor was the
only truly portable instrument used
in thesetests. It operated well in environments with temperatures
ranging from ~20 to +40°C.Its
measurement capabilities were essentially independent of the
presence of water vapor, droplets,

or dust in the absorption ceil.
Stations 7 and 8 had, in addition
to the usual grab samplers and

sight that extended through the gas and 6 are 2.1 m,station 4 is 1.5m,
plume. It used a pulsed laserto ex- and station 3 is 0.6m above the
pond surface. Stations 1 and 2 are
cite the gas and then measured
time-gated Raman-scattered return on the pond. The laser beam of the
LIDAR was about 2m above the
signals from the 9-m-long range
surface of the pond.
gates shown in Fig. 1.
At each of stations ] through 8
there was a thermocouple, a grab Atmospheric transport
sampler, and a gas sensor measur- modeling
In each experiment, we used the
ing conditions at a standard height
atmospheric transport model
of 0.9m above the ground. Most
stations had an auxiliary therATMAS* to aid in the analysis of
mocouple at 0.6 m. Stations 3 and _the measured concentration data.
6 were more complex, with towers The ATMAScode is a threedimensional computer model that
4.5m tall carrying thermocouples
at the top and at 3.6, 2.4, and
we developed to predict the
1.5m. There was also a grab sam- transport of pollutants entering the
atmosphere from extended or mulpler, gas sensor(TSI), and thermocouple at 2.4 m, and a separate tiple sources. One of its major
grab sampler and thermocouple at capabilities is that of simulating a
three-dimensional, time-varying
0.45 m.
wind field from wind data obtained
Because the ground rises immediately downwind from the spill at different points within the region
of interest. A time-varying windpond, stations 7 and 8 are 6m
above the pond surface. Stations 5 field model is much morerealistic

thermocouples, Mine Safety Ap-

pliances (MSA) gas sensors. These

sensors used a filament covered
with a catalyst (to promote combustion} together with a means of
measuring the heat evolved. They
detected gas only up to the
stoichiometric concentration
(10 vol% for methane).
The LIDAR instrument, used

only in the second test of the series, —
operated remotely over a line of

Talolle Jl

A summary of the 5-m7 LNGspill tests at the Naval Weapons
Center, China Lake, California.
Test number

1

2

3

Date
Time
Temperature, °C
Relative humidity, %
Spill volume, m°
Spill duration, s

31 Aug
14:56
35.8
16
4.39
67

13 Sept
19:37
21.1
29
4.52
59

9 Nov
15:26
26.8
15
4.5
77

20 Nov
15:11
20.1
21
4.2
32

Spill radius, m
Boiloff time, s

7.22
90

7.81
80

6.82
85

Variable
120

Source rate, kg/s

20.58

93.84

22.34

4

44.0 (g/m?-s)

Select target paragraph3