Environmental research | 2019

Utilization of activated carbon as an effective replacement for a commercialized three-bed sorbent (Carbopack) to quantitate aromatic hydrocarbons in ambient air.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


The potential use of activated carbon (AC) as an inexpensive and effective alternative sorbent material in thermal desorption is presented and validated for the analysis of aromatic volatile organic compounds (VOCs) such as benzene, toluene, m-xylene, and styrene (BTXS) in air. The optimum desorption conditions of an AC sampling tube (2\xa0mg AC bed) were determined and compared with a commercial three-bed (Carbopack; C\xa0+\xa0B\xa0+\xa0X) tube sampler as a reference. The AC sampler exhibited good linearity (R2\u202f>\u202f0.99) and reproducibility (RSE of 2.38\u202f±\u202f0.21%) for BTXS analysis. The AC tube sampler showed good storability (up to 3\u202fd) and excellent recyclability (up to 50 cycles). An analysis of BTXS in ambient air showed excellent agreement between AC and CBX (bias\u202f<\u202f5%). The 1% breakthrough volume values for 2\u202fmg AC, when tested at 100\u202fppb of benzene as a sole component or in a BTXS mixture, were 10,000 or 5000\u202fL\u202fg-1, respectively. The results of this study support the performance of AC as a suitable medium for sampling VOCs as reliable as high-cost commercial sorbent products.

Volume 179 Pt A
Pages \n 108802\n
DOI 10.1016/j.envres.2019.108802
Language English
Journal Environmental research

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