Development, Demonstration, and Evaluation of Routine Monitoring of Aerosol Carbon, Oxygen, and Sulfur Content.

ACS EST Air

Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia 24061, United States.

Published: June 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Traditional methods for measuring the chemical composition of particulate matter are expensive and complex, mostly using research-grade instruments that aren't suitable for routine monitoring.
  • A new online instrument called "ChemSpot" has been developed to autonomously measure key characteristics like organic aerosol mass loading and sulfur content, offering a cost-effective alternative.
  • The ChemSpot has shown high particle collection efficiency and quick heating capabilities, with its results closely correlating to those from more traditional methods, indicating it can operate reliably over long periods.

Article Abstract

Traditional online measurements of the chemical composition of particulate matter have relied on expensive and complex research-grade instrumentation based on mass spectrometry and/or chromatography. However, routine monitoring requires lower-cost alternatives that can be operated autonomously, and such tools are lacking. Routine monitoring of particulate matter, especially organic aerosol, relies instead on offline techniques such as filter collection that require significant operator effort. To address this gap, we present here a new online instrument, the "ChemSpot", that provides information on organic aerosol mass loading, volatility, and degree of oxygenation, along with sulfur content. The instrument grows particles with water condensation, impacts them onto a passivated surface with low heat capacity, and uses stepped thermal desorption of analytes to a combination of flame ionization detector (FID) and flame photometric detector (FPD) and then to a CO detector downstream of the FID/FPD setup. By relying on detectors designed for gas chromatography, calibration is achieved almost entirely through the introduction of gases without the need for regular introduction of particle-phase calibrants. Particle collection efficiency of greater than 95% was achieved consistently, and the collection cell was shown to rapidly and precisely heat to ∼800 °C at a rate as fast as 10 °C per second. Measurements of total organic carbon, volatility distribution of organic aerosol, total sulfur, and oxygen-to-carbon ratio (O:C) collected during a continuous multi-week period are presented here to demonstrate the autonomous operation of "ChemSpot". Colocated measurements with a mass spectrometer, an aerosol chemical speciation monitor (ACSM), show good correlation and relatively low bias between the instruments (mean absolute percentage error of 21% and 27% for organic carbon and equivalent sulfate measurements, respectively).

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11184560PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsestair.3c00059DOI Listing

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