Zhao, C. L. and
P. P. Tans, (2006),
Estimating uncertainty of the WMO mole fraction scale for carbon dioxide in air,
Journal of Geophysical Research-Atmospheres, 111, D8, doi:10.1029/2005JD006003
The current WMO CO2 Mole Fraction Scale consists of a set of 15 CO2-in-air primary standard calibration gases ranging in CO2 mole
fraction from 250 to 520 mu mol mol(-1). Since the WMO CO2 Expert Group
transferred responsibility for maintaining the WMO Scale from the
Scripps Institution of Oceanography (SIO) to the Climate Monitoring and
Diagnostics Laboratory (CMDL) in 1995, the 15 WMO primary standards
have been calibrated, first at SIO and then at regular intervals,
between 1 and 2 years, by the CMDL manometric system. The uncertainty
of the 15 primary standards was estimated to be 0.069 mu mol mol(-1)
(one-sigma) in the absolute sense. Manometric calibrations results
indicate that there is no evidence of overall drift of the Primaries
from 1996 to 2004. In order to lengthen the useful life of the Primary
standards, CMDL has always transferred the scale via NDIR analyzers to
the secondary standards. The uncertainties arising from the analyzer
random error and the propagation error due to the uncertainty of the
reference gas mole fraction are discussed. Precision of NDIR transfer
calibrations was about 0.014 mu mol mol(-1) from 1979 to present.
Propagation of the uncertainty was calculated theoretically. In the
case of interpolation the propagation error was estimated to be between
0.06 and 0.07 mu mol mol(-1) when the Primaries were used as the
reference gases via NDIR transfer calibrations. The CMDL secondary
standard calibrations are transferred via NDIR analyzers to the working
standards, which are used routinely for measuring atmospheric CO2 mole
fraction in the WMO Global Atmosphere Watch monitoring program. The
uncertainty of the working standards was estimated to be 0.071 mu mol
mol(-1) in the one-sigma absolute scale. Consistency among the working
standards is determined by the random errors of downward transfer
calibrations at each level and is about 0.02 mu mol mol(-1). For
comparison with an independent absolute scale, the five gravimetric
standards from the National Institute for the Environmental Studies
(NIES) in Tsukuba, Japan, ranging in CO2 mole fraction from 350 to 390
mu mol mol(-1) have been calibrated relative to the CMDL secondary
standards. The average and standard deviation of the differences
between the NIES gravimetric and CMDL analyzed CO2 mole fraction are
0.004 +/- 0.03 mu mol mol(-1).