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Page added on October 25, 2008

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The Most Potent Unknown Greenhouse Gas Revealed

A gas used in manufacture of flat panel televisions, computer displays, microcircuits, and thin-film solar panels is 17,000 times more potent a greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide, and it is far more prevalent in the atmosphere than previously estimated.

The powerful greenhouse gas nitrogen trifluoride, NF3, is at least four times more widespread than scientists had believed, according to new research by a team at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California, San Diego.
Using new analytical techniques, a team led by Scripps geochemistry professor Ray Weiss made the first atmospheric measurements of nitrogen trifluoride, NF3.


“Accurately measuring small amounts of NF3 in air has proven to be a very difficult experimental problem, and we are very pleased to have succeeded in this effort,” Weiss said Thursday, announcing the results of his team’s research.


The research findings will be published October 31 in “Geophysical Research Letters,” a journal of the American Geophysical Union.
Scripps geoscientists Ray Weiss, left, and Jens Muehle show cylinders used to collect air samples that they analyzed for concentrations of nitrogen trifluoride. (Photo courtesy Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UC San Diego)


The amount of the gas in the atmosphere, which could not be detected using previous techniques, had been estimated at less than 1,200 metric tons in 2006. The new research shows the actual amount was 4,200 metric tons.


In 2008, about 5,400 metric tons of the gas was in the atmosphere, a quantity that is increasing at about 11 percent per year.


ENS



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