The Federal Reference Method (FRM) was the original method of measuring ozone concentration in the air, being used throughout the United States around the 1970s and 1980s. It uses what is known as gas-phase ethylene-
chemiluminescence or ET-CL. The ozone content is measured based on the reaction when the air around the monitor reacts with the
ethylene reactant gas within the monitor. As of 2015, the
EPA added an additional format to the FRM using
nitric oxide chemiluminescence or NO-CL. It functions in a very similar manner to that of the ET-CL format except it uses nitric oxide instead of ethylene gas. The FRM has, for the most part, been phased due water vapor causing skewed results and has been replaced with the Federal Equivalent Method which uses ultraviolet absorption. However, the FRM it still used occasionally as the Federal Equivalent Method can be skewed by concentration of other pollutants in higher quantities such as mercury, sulfur dioxide, carbon dioxide,
VOCs, and others. == Federal Equivalent Method ==