Title: Atmospheric Chemistry Measurements – Organics in Air
1Atmospheric Chemistry Measurements Organics in
Air
2Organic Chemistry - Carbon Compounds
- Carbon - C, atomic number 6, molecular weight 12
- Electron configuration 1s22s22p2
- Tetravalent, covalent bonds 4 single bonds
(sp3) 2 double bonds (sp2) one triple (sp) plus
one single bond - Other atoms hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, sulfur,
halogens (Cl, F, Br)
3Compounds
- Alkanes CnH2n2 (CH4, C2H6, etc)
- Alkenes CnH2n (C2H4, etc)
- Alkynes - CnH2n-2 (C2H2)
- Aromatic compounds (C6H6, benzene)
- Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons - PAH
(naphthalene, C10H8)
4Models
CH3 CH3
Ethane
Methane
5Ethylene (Etene)
Pentane
CH3-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH3
6CH3CH2OH
Ethanol
Benzene
7Sources of Organics in Air
- Anthropogenic
- Incomplete combustion of fossil fuels
- Biomass burning
- Industrial processes
- Cooking
- Natural sources
- Biogenic emissions (from vegetation)
- Volcanic
- Evaporation of sea spray
- Atmospheric reaction products (from VOC, SVOC),
secondary organic aerosol (SOA)
8Fossil fuels
Complete combustion CxHy (x y/4)O2 xCO2
y/2H2O e.g. C5H12 8O2 5CO2
6H2O Incomplete CO, soot, organics and (in air)
NOx
9Biomass Burning
Biomass cellulose, hemi-cellulose, lignin,
resins
10Other sources - testing
Residential wood Combustion
Meat cooking
11Secondary Organic Aerosol (SOA)
- SOA processes are studied in photoreactors
- European photoreactor (EUPHORE) in Valencia,
Spain, is one of the largest (200 m3) and the
best-equipped outdoor simulation chamber in the
world - We are studying atmospheric transformation of
diesel emissions under the influence of sunlight,
ozone, hydroxyl radicals that occur during
transport in ambient air
12Volatile, Semi-Volatile and Particulate Matter
Organic Compounds (VOC, SVOC, PM)
- Vapor pressure ranges
- VOC gt 102 Pa (10-1 Torr)
- SVOC 102 and 10-6 Pa (10-1 and 10-8 Torr)
- PM lt 10-6 Pa (10-8 Torr)
13Organic Aerosol
- Organic aerosols are solid or liquid particles
suspended in the atmosphere containing organic
carbon - Semi-volatile organic compounds (SVOC) -
distributed between gas and particle phases
reversibly condensable - Particle associated organics complex mixture,
incorporated into/onto particles includes
condensed SVOC and non-volatile organic compounds
14Criteria Pollutants National Ambient Air
Quality Standards (NAAQS)
- Particulate Matter (PM)
- Ozone
- NOx
- SO2
- CO
- Lead (Pb)
- Ambient standards established by the US EPA and
reviewed every 5 years
15Why Particulate Matter?
- Health effects particulate matter (fine, PM2.5
and to lesser degree, coarse PM10-2.5) has been
associated with adverse health effects at
low-to-moderate concentrations - NAAQS exist for PM (since 1971)
- current (since 1997) PM2.5 annual 15 µg/m3 and
24-hr 65 µg/m3 PM10 annual 50 µg/m3 and 24-hr
150 µg/m3 - _ announced in September 2006 PM2.5 annual
15 µg/m3 and 24-hr 35 µg/m3 PM10 annual only - Climate change
- Visibility problem (Haze Rule)
16Average Ambient PM2.5 Composition in Urban Areas
EPA STN network
17Average PM10-2.5, PM2.5, and PM0.1 composition at
EPA supersite in Los Angeles, CA, 10/2001 to
9/2002 US EPA OAQPS PM Staff Paper, June 2005
18Hazardous Air Pollutants (HAPs)
- Full list 188 compounds, most of them organics
- The short list 33 air toxics, most prevalent in
urban area - No ambient standards regulation of emissions
from sources
19(No Transcript)
20Measurement Methods
- Collection of VOC and aerosol samples followed by
off-site laboratory analyses - VOC collection stainless steel SUMMA canisters,
Tedlar bags - PM and SVOC Filters followed by solid
adsorbents. Extraction with organic solvents in
the laboratory
21Operational Definitions of SVOC and PM -
Associated OC
22Analysis - Chromatography
- Chromatography is a separation method that relies
on differences in partitioning behavior between a
flowing mobile phase and a stationary phase to
separate the components in a mixture - Gas-liquid chromatography (GC) mobile phase is
gas (He, N2, H2) - Liquid chromatography (LC) mobile phase is
liquid. High performance liquid chromatography
(HPLC) utilizes high-pressure pumps to increase
the efficiency of the separation.
23Gas Chromatography (GC)
- Columns
- Packed columns, 1-10 m long, 2-4 mm ID (filled
with solid support material coated with liquid or
solid stationary phase) - Capillary columns, 10 60 m long, lt1 mm ID (the
inner column walls are coated with stationary
phase)
24Detectors for GC and HPLC
- Gas Chromatography detectors
- Flame Ionization (FID)- hydrocarbons
- Thermal Conductivity (TCD) - universal
- Electron Capture (ECD) halogenated organics
- Photoionization (PID) - aromatics, olefins
- Fourier Transform Infrared (GC-FTIR) all
organics - Mass Spectrometer (GC-MS) any species
- HPLC Detectors
- UV-VIS absorption spectroscopy
- Photo diode-array UV-VIS
- Fluorescence
- MS (LC-MS)
25Mass Spectrometry measures the mass-to-charge
ratio (m/z) of charged particles to find the
composition of a sample by generating a mass
spectrum representing the masses of sample
components.
Mass Spectrometer
Sample Inlet
High vacuum
Mass Analyzer
Detector
Ion Source
Data Analysis
26Ion Source
- Ionization methods Electron Impact (EI),
Chemical Ionization (CI), Field Ionization (FI),
Field Desorption (FD), Fast Atom Bombardment
(FAB), Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption/
Ionization (MALDI), Electrospray Ionization
(ESI), and others.. - EI (unimolecular) bombarding neutral analyte M
with high energy (70 eV) electron beam - M e- M? 2e-
- CI (bimolecular) M interacts with ions from
reagent gas - M BH MH B (proton transfer)
- M X MX (electrophilic addition)
- M X M? X (charge exchange)
- M X ? M-A AX (anion
abstraction)
27Principle of mass analysis
- When the ion beam experiences a strong magnetic
field perpendicular to its direction of motion,
the ions are deflected in an arc whose radius is
inversely proportional to the mass of the ion
(mass-to-charge ratios m/z). Lighter ions are
deflected more than heavier ions. By varying the
strength of the magnetic field, ions of different
mass (m/z) can be focused progressively on a
detector fixed at the end of a curved tube
28Mass Analyzers
- Types of mass analyzers
- magnetic sector (deflection of ion beam,
separation by momentum) - linear quadrupole (4 rod electrodes, the pair of
opposite rods are each held at the same potential
composed of DC and AC component a mass spectrum
is obtained by monitoring the ions passing
through the quadrupole filter as the voltages on
the rods are varied) - quadrupole ion trap (three-dimensional RF
quadrupole field to store ions within defined
boundaries) - time-of-flight (TOF, uses the differences in
transit time through a drift region to separate
ions of different masses ).
29Advances in Mass Spectrometry
- "Aerosol -MS" is the measurement in real-time of
the aerosol composition using a mass
spectrometer. Almost always the particle size is
measured simultaneously with the composition. Two
approaches - Single particle MS Laser desorption-ionization
MS. Example Aerosol Time of Flight MS (ATOFMS,
available commercially from TSI, Inc.) - Thermal desorption aerosol MS. Example Aerodyne
Aerosol MS, available commercially
(http//cires.colorado.edu/jjose/ams.htmlInfo_Ae
rosolMS).
30Aerodyne Aerosol Mass Spectrometer (AMS)
Particle
Aerodynamic Sizing
Particle Beam
Composition
Generation
Quadrupole Mass Spectrometer
Chopper
Thermal Vaporization Electron Impact Ionization
TOF Region
Aerodynamic Lens (2 Torr)
Turbo Pump
Turbo Pump
Turbo Pump
Particle Inlet (1 atm)
100 transmission (60-600 nm), aerodynamic
sizing, linear mass signal. Jayne et al., Aerosol
Science and Technology 331-2(49-70),
2000. Jimenez et al., Journal of Geophysical
Research, 108(D7), 8425, doi10.1029 /
2001JD001213, 2003.
31Aerodyne Aerosol Mass Spectrometer (AMS)
100 transmission (60-600 nm), aerodynamic
sizing, linear mass signal. Jayne et al., Aerosol
Science and Technology 331-2(49-70),
2000. Jimenez et al., Journal of Geophysical
Research, 108(D7), 8425, doi10.1029 /
2001JD001213, 2003.