knitr::opts_chunk$set( collapse = TRUE, comment = "#>" ) options(tidyverse.quiet = TRUE)
In this example we will process the raw_twogases
dataset which contains both CO~2~ and CH~4~ concentrations measured simultaneously.
The aim is a single dataset of fluxes in which the CH~4~ fluxes where also discarded when the CO~2~ fluxes were discarded.
The concept is that we will treat the dataset twice, once for each gas, and then join them again in the end.
Because f_fluxid
is produced in chronological order based on start datetime in field_record
, the fluxes measured at the same time have the same f_fluxid
.
First we use flux_match
to slice the raw concentration data and attribute a unique ID to each measurement.
library(fluxible) library(tidyverse) conc_twogases <- flux_match( raw_conc = raw_twogases, field_record = twogases_record, f_datetime = datetime, start_col = start, measurement_length = 180, time_diff = 0 )
Then we fit a model to the raw data for each gas:
slopes_twogases_co2 <- flux_fitting( conc_df = conc_twogases, f_conc = co2_conc, f_datetime = datetime, fit_type = "exp_zhao18", start_cut = 10 ) slopes_twogases_ch4 <- flux_fitting( conc_df = conc_twogases, f_conc = ch4_conc, f_datetime = datetime, fit_type = "exp_zhao18", start_cut = 10 )
Same with the quality, we do it once for each gas:
flag_twogases_co2 <- flux_quality( slopes_df = slopes_twogases_co2, f_conc = co2_conc, force_discard = "8" # peak at the start that is probably an error ) flag_twogases_ch4 <- flux_quality( slopes_df = slopes_twogases_ch4, f_conc = ch4_conc, ambient_conc = 2000 # default is for CO2 )
We check the fits with flux_plot
:
flag_twogases_co2 |> flux_plot( f_conc = co2_conc, f_datetime = datetime, f_ylim_upper = 500, f_ylim_lower = 425, y_text_position = 460 )
flag_twogases_ch4 |> flux_plot( f_conc = ch4_conc, f_datetime = datetime, f_ylim_upper = 2000, f_ylim_lower = 1995, y_text_position = 1997 )
After calculating the fluxes, we need to rename the f_flux
column to avoid confusion when joining the datasets:
fluxes_twogases_co2 <- flux_calc( slopes_df = flag_twogases_co2, slope_col = f_slope_corr, f_datetime = datetime, temp_air_col = temp_air, conc_unit = "ppm", flux_unit = "mmol/m2/h", setup_volume = 6.31, atm_pressure = 1, plot_area = 0.31, # we want to use the quality flags of CO2 to eventally discard CH4 fluxes cols_keep = "f_quality_flag" ) |> rename( # to avoid any confusion, we rename the flux column flux_co2 = "f_flux" ) |> # and we remove the slope one select(-f_slope_corr) fluxes_twogases_ch4 <- flux_calc( slopes_df = flag_twogases_ch4, slope_col = f_slope_corr, f_datetime = datetime, temp_air_col = temp_air, conc_unit = "ppb", # ch4 is measured in ppb flux_unit = "umol/m2/h", # we want a flux in umol/m2/h setup_volume = 6.31, atm_pressure = 1, plot_area = 0.31 ) |> rename( # to avoid any confusion, we rename the flux column flux_ch4 = "f_flux" ) |> # and we remove the slope one select(-f_slope_corr)
Then we can join the datasets.
If the final dataset ends up being longer, it probably means that some values in columns that should be equal (f_temp_air_ave
for example) are in fact not equal, which leads to additional rows when joining the dataframes.
fluxes_twogases <- left_join( fluxes_twogases_co2, fluxes_twogases_ch4, by = c( # if that does not work, then it means that we did # something different for one of the gases "f_fluxid", "f_temp_air_ave", "datetime", "f_model" ) ) |> mutate( # we discard the CH4 fluxes based on CO2 fluxes quality flags flux_ch4 = case_when( f_quality_flag %in% c("discard", "force_discard") ~ NA, .default = flux_ch4 ) )
Structure of fluxes_twogases
:
str(fluxes_twogases, width = 70, strict.width = "cut", give.attr = FALSE)
In this example we calculated the fluxes for two gases measured simultaneously by repeating the process for each gas, and in the end we joined them and applied a rule that discarded the fluxes of one gas based on the quality flags of the other. It is of course totally possible to apply other rules, or to just keep the fluxes as provided by Fluxible.
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