| Literature DB >> 26126962 |
Abstract
The analysis of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) in ambient air requires the tedious experimental steps of both sampling and pretreatment (e.g., extraction or clean-up). To replace pre-existing conventional methods, a simple, rapid, and novel technique was developed to measure gas-particle fractionation of PAH in ambient air based on 'sorbent tube-thermal desorption-gas chromatograph-mass spectrometer (ST-TD-GC-MS)'. The separate collection and analysis of ambient PAHs were achieved independently by two serially connected STs. The basic quality assurance confirmed good linearity, precision, and high sensitivity to eliminate the need for complicated pretreatment procedures with the detection limit (16 PAHs: 13.1 ± 7.04 pg). The analysis of real ambient PAH samples showed a clear fractionation between gas (two-three ringed PAHs) and particulate phases (five-six ringed PAHs). In contrast, for intermediate (four ringed) PAHs (fluoranthene, pyrene, benz[a]anthracene, and chrysene), a highly systematic/gradual fractionation was established. It thus suggests a promising role of ST-TD-GC-MS as measurement system in acquiring a reliable database of airborne PAH.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26126962 PMCID: PMC4486962 DOI: 10.1038/srep11679
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Operational conditions for the analysis of 16 target PAHs using the TD-GC-MS system in this work.
| 1. Trap tube: | Quartz (length: 90 mm, OD: 6.4 mm, and ID: 4.2 mm) | |||
| 2. Adsorbent: | (1) Quartz wool 25 mg (QW tube); | |||
| (2) Quartz wool 10 mg + Carbopack C (60/80) 50 mg + Quartz wool 10 mg (CC tube) | ||||
| 3. Desorption flow: | 100 mL·min−1 (to cold-trap) | |||
| 4. Desorption time: | 7 min | |||
| 5. Desorption temperature: | 290 °C | |||
| 1. Trap tube: | Silcosteel (length: 100 mm, OD: 3.2 mm, and ID: 2 mm) | |||
| 2. Adsorbent: | Quartz wool 10 mg + Tenax TA 50 mg | |||
| 3. Adsorption temperature: | 5 °C (from sampling tube) | |||
| 4. Desorption temperature: | 300 °C (to GC) | |||
| 5. Desorption flow: | 16 mL·min−1 | |||
| 1. Carrier gas: | Helium (>99.999%) | |||
| 2. Constant gas flow: | 2 mL·min−1 | |||
| 3. Split flow: | 10 mL·min−1 | |||
| 4. Purge gas flow: | 2 mL·min−1 | |||
| a. Column: | DB-5ms (Agilent J&W, USA) | |||
| (length (30 m), diameter (0.25 mm), and film thickness (0.25 μm)) | ||||
| b. Oven settings: | 80 °C (5 min) → 20 °C/min → 300 °C (24 min) | |||
| (Total program time = 40 min) | ||||
| a. Ionization mode: | EI (70 eV) | d. TIC scan range: | 35 ~ 600 m/z | |
| b. Ion source temperature: | 280 °C | e. Scan speed: | 1250 | |
| c. Interface temperature: | 280 °C | |||
Comparison of detection limits and pretreatment procedures for PAH analysis in different studies.
| Order | Method | Detection limit (pg) | Pretreatment procedures | Ref. | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Code | Mean ± SD | Min–Max | Used filter | Extracted | Injection | Expected | ||||
| MDL | LOD | MDL | LOD | area (%) | volume (μL) | volume (μL) | recovery (%) | |||
| 1 | T-AbBd-4-α | 13.1 ± 7.04 | 0.76 ± 0.20 | 5.19–27.0 | 0.57–1.23 | 100 | — | — | 100 | |
| 2 | T-Aa-4-α | 122 ± 69.0 | 25 | — | — | 25 | Bates | |||
| 3 | T-AcBe-4-α | 1.86 ± 0.79 | 0.86–3.74 | 100 | — | — | 100 | Wauters | ||
| 4 | T-AcBe-4-α | 67.9 ± 83.5 | 1.44–259 | 100 | — | — | 100 | Lazarov | ||
| 5 | C-Ab-1-α | 208 ± 138 | 66.2–497 | 50 | 100 | 2 | 1 | Bari | ||
| 6 | C-AbBd-1-α | 9.21–25.3 | 100 | 1,000 | 2 | 0.2 | Ma | |||
| 7 | C-AbBd-1-α | 6.9–157 | 100 | 500 | 1 | 0.2 | Sheu | |||
| 8 | C-AaBd-1-α | 200–1,000 | 100 | 1,000 | 1 | 0.1 | Anthwal | |||
| 9 | C-AaBd-1-γ | 0.58–7.99 | 100 | 1,000 | 20 | 2 | Albinet | |||
| 10 | C-Aa-1-γ | 2.09 ± 1.11 | 0.70–4.30 | 0.28 | 500 | 20 | 0.011 | Okuda | ||
| 11 | C-AbBd-1-β | 330 ± 116 | 220–440 | 100 | 500 | 10 | 2 | Yamasaki | ||
| 12 | C-Aa-3-α | 566 ± 336 | 20–1,160 | 100 | — | — | — | Menezes and de Lourdes Cardeal | ||
| 13 | C-Ac-2-γ | 7.69 ± 4.54 | 2.51–14.8 | 100 | 1,000 | 20 | 2 | Schnelle-Kreis | ||
aMethod code: Method type-Phase/Sampler-Pretreatment-Separation/Detection (refer to the Fig. 1).
Figure 1Flow chart of analytical options for the quantitation of ambient PAH between gas and particles. Abbreviation:A.
Sampler (QF = quartz filter, GF = glass filter, UAF = ungreased aluminium foil, PUF = polyurethane foam, QW = quartz wool tube, PDMS = polydimethylsiloxane, CC = Carbopack C tube, and Te = Tenax TA); B. Pretreatment (E-C-C = Extraction-Cleanup-Concentration, SPME = Utilized direct immersion-Cold fiber-Solid phase microextraction, and TD = thermal desorption); and C. Separation/Detection (GC = gas chromatography; HPLC = high-performance liquid chromatography, MS = mass spectrometry, FLD = fluorescence, and FID = flame ionization detector).
Overview of sampling conditions for PAHs with several types of analytical methods.
| Order | Method | No. of | Sampling conditions | Ref. | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Code | target | Pump | Site | Period | Flow rate | Time | Volume | |||
| PAHs | Rings | (starting time) | (m3·min−1) | (hr) | (m3) | |||||
| 1 | T-AbBd-4-α | 16 | 2–6 | Sibata MP300 | Seoul, Korea (7th building) | 7 ~ 11 Oct. 2014 (00:00) | 0.002 | 12 | 1.44 | This study (2014) |
| 2 | T-Aa-4-α | 9 | 4–6 | LVAS | Bari, Italy (street with traffic) | NI | 0.01667 | 24 | 24 | Bates, |
| 3 | T-AcBe-4-α | 16 | 2–6 | Gilair 3 personal air sampling pump | Ghent, Belgium (Lab campus) | Apr. 2005 ~ Mar. 2006 | 0.0001 | 24 | 0.144 | Wauters |
| 4 | T-AcBe-4-α | 16 | 2–6 | GSA SG350 | Antwerp, Belgium | Mar. ~ May 2012 | 0.000333 | 24 | 480 | Lazarov |
| 5 | C-Ab-1-α | 21 | 2–6 | LVAS | Dettenhausen, Germany | 1 Nov. 2005 ~ 31 Mar 2006 | 0.038 | 48 and 72 | 110 and 166 | Bari, |
| 6 | C-AbBd-1-α | 16 | 2–6 | HVAS | Harbin, China (Northeastern) | 5 Aug. 2008 ~ 29 July 2009 | 0.8 | 24 | 1,152 | Ma, |
| 7 | C-AbBd-1-α | 21 | 2–6 | HVAS | Center of Tainan City, Taiwan | 21 Jan. ~ 25 May 1994 | 0.69 | 24 | 1,000 | Sheu, |
| 8 | C-AaBd-1-α | 17 | 2–6 | HVAS | Seoul, Korea | Feb. ~ July 2009 | 0.8 | 24 | 1,152 | Anthwal, |
| 9 | C-AaBd-1-γ | 15 | 3–7 | HVAS | Marseilles area, South of France | 22 ~ 29 July 2004 (08:00) | 0.5 | 12 | 360 | Albinet, |
| 10 | C-Aa-1-γ | 16 | 3–7 | HVAS | Beijing, China | Sept. 2003 ~ Apr. 2005 (11:00) | 0.8 | 24 | 1,152 | Okuda, |
| 11 | C-AbBd-1-β | 17 | 3–6 | HVAS | Osaka, Japan | 7, Nov. 1977 ~ 9, Nov. 1978 | 0.75 | 24 | 1,080 | Yamasaki, |
| 12 | C-Aa-3-α | 16 | 2–6 | HVAS | Divinopolis and Minas Gerais, Brazil | Nov. 2009 | 1.03 | 24 | 1,488 | Menezes and de Lourdes Cardeal |
| 13 | C-Ac-2-γ | 7 | 3–6 | LPI | Munich, Germany | 1996 ~ 1998 | 0.02971 | 23.5 | 42 | Schnelle-Kreis, |
| 14 | C-AbBd-1-α | 11 | 3–6 | HVAS | Chicago and Michigan, USA | July 1994 (08:00) | 0.5–0.8 | 12 | 360–576 | Simcik, |
| 15 | C-AbBd-1-α | 16 | 2–6 | HVAS | Beijing, China | 6 Sept. 2008 ~ 29 July 2009 | 0.8 | 24 | 1,152 | Ma, |
aMethod code: Method type-Phase/Sampler-Pretreatment-Separation/Detection (refer to the Fig. 1).
bLVAS = low-volume air sampler; HVAS = high-volume air sampler; low = pressure cascade impactor.
cNo information.
Quantitative analysis of PAHs in ambient air samples collected continuously using the ST/TD-GC-MS system.
Figure 2Chromatograms of the 16 PAH measured from ambient air samples collected on the fourth of five consecutive daily runs (Particle (QW-4) vs. gas phases (CC-4)).
Comparison of the concentration levels of ambient PAHs in different studies.
Figure 3Sampling of PAHs in ambient air using a sorbent tube equipped with a vacuum pump (Sampling point: Seventh floor of the Jae Sung Engineering Building, Seoul, Korea).
Figure 4Schematic of the relationship between the QC sampler (combination of quartz wool (QW) and Carbopack C (CC) tubes) and collected PAHs (between particulate and gaseous phases).