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Published September 1, 2001 | public
Journal Article

Gas/Solid Partitioning of Semivolatile Organic Compounds (SOCs) to Air Filters. 3. An Analysis of Gas Adsorption Artifacts in Measurements of Atmospheric SOCs and Organic Carbon (OC) When Using Teflon Membrane Filters and Quartz Fiber Filters

Abstract

Adsorption of gaseous semivolatile organic compounds (SOCs) onto the filter(s) of a filter/sorbent sampler is a potential source of measurement error when determining specific SOCs as well as organic carbon (OC) levels in the atmosphere. This work examines partitioning to both Teflon membrane filters (TMFs) and quartz fiber filters (QFFs) for purposes of predicting the magnitude of the compound-dependent gas adsorption artifact as a function of various sampling parameters. The examination is based on values of K_(p,face) (m^3 cm^(-2)), the gas/filter partition coefficient expressed as [ng sorbed per cm^2 of filter face]/[ng per m^3 in the gas phase]. Values of K_(p,face) were calculated based on literature values of the gas/solid partition coefficient K_(p,s) [ng sorbed per m^2 of filter]/[ng per m^3 in gas phase] for the adsorption of various polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), polychlorinated dibenzodioxins (PCDDs), and polychlorinated dibenzofurans (PCDFs) to TMFs, and for the adsorption of PAHs to QFFs. At relative humidity (RH) values below ≈50%, the K_(p,face) values for PAHs are lower on TMFs than on ambient-backup QFFs. The gas adsorption artifact will therefore be lower for PAHs with TMFs than with QFFs under these conditions. In the past, corrections for the gas/filter adsorption artifact have been made by using a backup filter, and subtracting the mass amount of each compound found on the backup filter from the total (particle phase + sorbed on filter) amount found on the front filter. This procedure assumes that the ng cm^(-2) amounts of each SOC sorbed on the front and backup filters are equal. That assumption will only be valid after both filters have reached equilibrium with each of the gaseous SOCs in the incoming sample air. The front filter will reach equilibrium first. The minimum air sample volume V_(min,f+b) required to reach gas/filter sorption equilibrium with a pair of filters is 2K_(p,face)A_(filter) where A_(filter) (cm^2) is the per-filter face area. K_(p,face) values, and therefore V_(min,f+b) values, depend on the compound, relative humidity (RH), temperature, and filter type. Compound-dependent V_(min,f+b) values are presented for PAHs and PCDD/Fs on both TMFs and QFFs. Compound-dependent equations which give the magnitude of the filter adsorption artifact are presented for a range of different sampling arrangements and circumstances. The equations are not intended for use in actually correcting field data because of uncertainties in actual field values of relevant parameters such as the compound-dependent K_(p,face) and gas/particle K_p values, and because of the fact that the equations assume ideal step-function chromatographic movement of gas-phase compounds through the adsorbing filter. Rather, the main utility of the equations is as guidance tools in designing field sampling efforts that utilize filter/sorbent samplers and in evaluating prior work. The results indicate that some backup-filter-based corrections described in the literature were carried out using sample volumes that were too small to allow proper correction for the gas adsorption artifact for some specific SOCs of interest. Similar conclusions are reached regarding artifacts associated with the measurement of gaseous and particulate OC.

Additional Information

© 2001 American Chemical Society. Received 16 August 2000. Date accepted 7 May 2001. Published online 8 August 2001. Published in print 1 September 2001. Funding for the project came in part from U.S. EPA Research Grant #R825376.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 25, 2023