A ground-based spectroscopic method for determining the trichlorofluoromethane (CCl3 F) content from measurements of IR spectra of solar radiation using an IFS-125HR Fourier spectrometer (FTIR method) is considered. A detector based on mercury–cadmium–tellurium (HgCdTe), which is used for measurements in the CCl3F absorption spectral region, was cooled by liquid N2. An amorphous ice film grew on the detector crystal as the vacuum in the metal Dewar flask gradually deteriorated during cooling. The spectral absorption band of amorphous ice at liquid N2 temperature overlapped the CCl3F absorption band. The variability of the ice film thickness added additional uncertainty to the estimates of the CCl3F atmospheric content. A technique has been developed to estimate the thickness of the ice film, to account for its spectral absorption in the algorithm for solving the inverse problem, and to eliminate this uncertainty. The technique was applied to measuring the atmospheric concentration of CCl3 F in 2017–2019 over the NDACC St.
Petersburg station. The results were compared with those obtained earlier using a technique in which the thickness of the ice fi lm was treated as an unknown parameter adjusted during solution of the inverse problem. Previously obtained CCl3 F atmospheric contents were refi ned using the proposed technique. The difference reached 10%.