Black Carbon Monitoring | BCM-650 Black Carbon Monitor by Vasthi

How Aethalometers Work: Real-Time Black Carbon Monitoring Technology Explained

Aethalometers are advanced instruments used to measure black carbon concentrations in real time using optical attenuation technology. This blog explains how aethalometers work, their 7-band analysis, and their role in environmental and industrial air quality monitoring.

How Aethalometers Work

An aethalometer is a specialized instrument designed to measure black carbon concentrations in real time. It is widely used across environmental monitoring stations, research labs, and industrial applications due to its accuracy, sensitivity, and ability to identify emission sources.

Basic Principle: Optical Attenuation

The working principle of an aethalometer is based on light absorption. Black carbon strongly absorbs light, unlike many other particles. By measuring how much light is absorbed, the instrument calculates the concentration of black carbon.

 

Step-by-Step Working Process

1. Air Intake

The instrument continuously draws ambient air using a pump at a controlled flow rate.

2. Particle Deposition

Air passes through a filter tape, where particulate matter (including black carbon) gets deposited.

3. Light Emission

A beam of light is directed onto the filter spot. Modern aethalometers use multiple wavelengths (typically 7-band from ~370 nm to 950 nm).

4. Light Detection

A sensor measures the intensity of light passing through the filter.

5. Absorption Measurement

As black carbon accumulates, it absorbs more light, reducing the transmitted intensity.

6. Data Conversion

The reduction in light is mathematically converted into black carbon concentration (ng/m³).

What is 7-Band Analysis?

A key advantage of modern aethalometers is multi-wavelength measurement.

Different sources absorb light differently at various wavelengths:

  • Lower wavelengths (~370 nm) → sensitive to biomass burning
  • Higher wavelengths (~880 nm) → sensitive to fossil fuel combustion

This allows the instrument to perform source apportionment, meaning:
- It can estimate how much pollution comes from diesel vs biomass.

Key Advantages of Aethalometers

  • Real-time monitoring (no delay like gravimetric methods)
  • High sensitivity (detects even very low concentrations)
  • Source differentiation capability
  • Continuous long-term data logging
  • Widely accepted in scientific and regulatory communities

Simple Understanding

Think of it like this:

  • Clean filter = more light passes through
  •  Dirty (blackened) filter = less light passes through

The instrument tracks this change continuously to calculate black carbon levels.

 

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