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A comparison of high volume and diffusion denuder samplers for measuring semivolatile organic compounds in the atmosphere.

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A comparison of high volume and diffusion denuder samplers for measuring semivolatile organic compounds in the atmosphere. / Peters, A. J.; Lane, D. A.; Gundel, L. A. et al.
In: Environmental Science and Technology, Vol. 34, No. 23, 01.12.2000, p. 5001-5006.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Peters, AJ, Lane, DA, Gundel, LA, Northcott, GL & Jones, KC 2000, 'A comparison of high volume and diffusion denuder samplers for measuring semivolatile organic compounds in the atmosphere.', Environmental Science and Technology, vol. 34, no. 23, pp. 5001-5006. https://doi.org/10.1021/es000056t

APA

Vancouver

Peters AJ, Lane DA, Gundel LA, Northcott GL, Jones KC. A comparison of high volume and diffusion denuder samplers for measuring semivolatile organic compounds in the atmosphere. Environmental Science and Technology. 2000 Dec 1;34(23):5001-5006. doi: 10.1021/es000056t

Author

Peters, A. J. ; Lane, D. A. ; Gundel, L. A. et al. / A comparison of high volume and diffusion denuder samplers for measuring semivolatile organic compounds in the atmosphere. In: Environmental Science and Technology. 2000 ; Vol. 34, No. 23. pp. 5001-5006.

Bibtex

@article{b0c0663bd4c649a8a2153c7f0b5426a8,
title = "A comparison of high volume and diffusion denuder samplers for measuring semivolatile organic compounds in the atmosphere.",
abstract = "A detailed comparison of two inherently different ambient air samplers has been conducted to fully characterize and compare their performance in sampling and measuring the partitioning of a suite of 29 semivolatile organic compounds (SVOCs). A high volume air sampler (hi-vol) utilizing polyurethane foam (PUF) adsorbent for vapor-phase trapping and an annular diffusion denuder sampler were operated concurrently. Sampling artifacts were observed and can be related to the physicochemical properties of the analytes and the designs of the samplers. The results suggest that high volume air samplers equipped with PUF are unsuitable for measuring those organochlorine compounds and 2- and 3-ring PAHs which have subcooled liquid vapor pressures (p°L) greater than ca. 0.2 Pa (log[p°L] = −0.7), owing to their breakthrough on PUF sampling media at relatively low sample volumes (170 m3) and ambient temperatures typical of temperate regions (mean = 11 °C, max = 18 °C). Theoretical calculations of breakthrough volumes for SVOCs on PUF are presented and in most cases these successfully predict observed behavior. The denuder sampler is more efficient at measuring the relatively volatile SVOCs. For total SVOC measurements the hi-vol and denuder were in good agreement for those compounds which were efficiently sampled, and the denuder yielded total SVOC concentrations which differed by a mean factor of 1.2 relative to those obtained with the hi-vol sampler. The hi-vol sampler provides good agreement with the Junge-Pankow model for partitioning of the relatively less volatile PAHs (log[p°L] < −3), though the fraction of the PCBs in the particle-phase is underestimated. The results from the diffusion denuder indicate that for the more volatile SVOCs (log[p°L] > −3), particulate loadings are overestimated with respect to the Junge-Pankow model, and for less volatile SVOCs, particulate loadings tend to be underestimated. An important observation is that the results from the denuder indicate that PCBs may be adsorbed on atmospheric particulate matter to a similar degree as PAHs.",
author = "Peters, {A. J.} and Lane, {D. A.} and Gundel, {L. A.} and Northcott, {Grant L.} and Jones, {Kevin C.}",
year = "2000",
month = dec,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1021/es000056t",
language = "English",
volume = "34",
pages = "5001--5006",
journal = "Environmental Science and Technology",
issn = "0013-936X",
publisher = "American Chemical Society",
number = "23",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A comparison of high volume and diffusion denuder samplers for measuring semivolatile organic compounds in the atmosphere.

AU - Peters, A. J.

AU - Lane, D. A.

AU - Gundel, L. A.

AU - Northcott, Grant L.

AU - Jones, Kevin C.

PY - 2000/12/1

Y1 - 2000/12/1

N2 - A detailed comparison of two inherently different ambient air samplers has been conducted to fully characterize and compare their performance in sampling and measuring the partitioning of a suite of 29 semivolatile organic compounds (SVOCs). A high volume air sampler (hi-vol) utilizing polyurethane foam (PUF) adsorbent for vapor-phase trapping and an annular diffusion denuder sampler were operated concurrently. Sampling artifacts were observed and can be related to the physicochemical properties of the analytes and the designs of the samplers. The results suggest that high volume air samplers equipped with PUF are unsuitable for measuring those organochlorine compounds and 2- and 3-ring PAHs which have subcooled liquid vapor pressures (p°L) greater than ca. 0.2 Pa (log[p°L] = −0.7), owing to their breakthrough on PUF sampling media at relatively low sample volumes (170 m3) and ambient temperatures typical of temperate regions (mean = 11 °C, max = 18 °C). Theoretical calculations of breakthrough volumes for SVOCs on PUF are presented and in most cases these successfully predict observed behavior. The denuder sampler is more efficient at measuring the relatively volatile SVOCs. For total SVOC measurements the hi-vol and denuder were in good agreement for those compounds which were efficiently sampled, and the denuder yielded total SVOC concentrations which differed by a mean factor of 1.2 relative to those obtained with the hi-vol sampler. The hi-vol sampler provides good agreement with the Junge-Pankow model for partitioning of the relatively less volatile PAHs (log[p°L] < −3), though the fraction of the PCBs in the particle-phase is underestimated. The results from the diffusion denuder indicate that for the more volatile SVOCs (log[p°L] > −3), particulate loadings are overestimated with respect to the Junge-Pankow model, and for less volatile SVOCs, particulate loadings tend to be underestimated. An important observation is that the results from the denuder indicate that PCBs may be adsorbed on atmospheric particulate matter to a similar degree as PAHs.

AB - A detailed comparison of two inherently different ambient air samplers has been conducted to fully characterize and compare their performance in sampling and measuring the partitioning of a suite of 29 semivolatile organic compounds (SVOCs). A high volume air sampler (hi-vol) utilizing polyurethane foam (PUF) adsorbent for vapor-phase trapping and an annular diffusion denuder sampler were operated concurrently. Sampling artifacts were observed and can be related to the physicochemical properties of the analytes and the designs of the samplers. The results suggest that high volume air samplers equipped with PUF are unsuitable for measuring those organochlorine compounds and 2- and 3-ring PAHs which have subcooled liquid vapor pressures (p°L) greater than ca. 0.2 Pa (log[p°L] = −0.7), owing to their breakthrough on PUF sampling media at relatively low sample volumes (170 m3) and ambient temperatures typical of temperate regions (mean = 11 °C, max = 18 °C). Theoretical calculations of breakthrough volumes for SVOCs on PUF are presented and in most cases these successfully predict observed behavior. The denuder sampler is more efficient at measuring the relatively volatile SVOCs. For total SVOC measurements the hi-vol and denuder were in good agreement for those compounds which were efficiently sampled, and the denuder yielded total SVOC concentrations which differed by a mean factor of 1.2 relative to those obtained with the hi-vol sampler. The hi-vol sampler provides good agreement with the Junge-Pankow model for partitioning of the relatively less volatile PAHs (log[p°L] < −3), though the fraction of the PCBs in the particle-phase is underestimated. The results from the diffusion denuder indicate that for the more volatile SVOCs (log[p°L] > −3), particulate loadings are overestimated with respect to the Junge-Pankow model, and for less volatile SVOCs, particulate loadings tend to be underestimated. An important observation is that the results from the denuder indicate that PCBs may be adsorbed on atmospheric particulate matter to a similar degree as PAHs.

U2 - 10.1021/es000056t

DO - 10.1021/es000056t

M3 - Journal article

VL - 34

SP - 5001

EP - 5006

JO - Environmental Science and Technology

JF - Environmental Science and Technology

SN - 0013-936X

IS - 23

ER -