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E.O. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
APPLICATION OF TECHNOLOGY:
- Carbon mass balance measurements in airborne particles
- Denuder substrates for all organic compounds
- Ambient air sampling for organic particulate matter
- Gas/particle partitioning data
- Indoor air sampling and air cleaning
- Air quality research studies
- EPA mandated air sampling
ADVANTAGES:
- Suitable for thermal analysis
- Trap organic compounds reversibly
- Simpler
- Cheaper
- Faster
- More accurate
ABSTRACT:
Lara Gundel of Berkeley Lab has developed new filter media that
allow for carbon mass balance measurements in airborne particles.
Currently, the only methods available for sampling total evolved
carbon involve collection on polyurethane foam (PUF) cartridges
or sorbent beds that must be extracted and analyzed for specific,
semivolatile, organic compounds. As of yet, there is no method for
quantitating the total organic material that evaporates from particles
during filter-based sampling. Berkeley Lab's new filter media supplies
an appropriate backup filter for a denuded adsorbing-filter system
which can be analyzed for total organic carbon. When used as adsorbing
backup filters, these media are efficient in capturing all organic
compounds that evaporate from the front filter during sampling,
and are suitable for thermal analysis. They can also be used as
denuder substrates, in which case the media efficiently remove all
gas phase organic compounds that would otherwise be collected by
the adsorbing backup filter. Berkeley Lab's new adsorbent filter
media trap organic compounds reversibly, and release them when heated
or extracted. The media are suitable for analysis of evolved carbon
at temperatures below 300 degrees Celsuis, corresponding to the
semivolatile constituents that evaporate from particles.
This approach has the potential of providing (1) a low blank when
analyzed by thermal analysis techniques, (2) an efficient yet compact
and low pressure drop collection material, and (3) efficient recovery
of evaporated organic particulate material. Berkeley Lab's new filter
media allows thermal analysis, which is simpler, cheaper, and faster
than extraction and analysis of PUF cartridges, and enables more
accurate measurements of outgassing from unstable particles. This
new filter media can be used for ambient air sampling for organic
particulate matter, such as has been mandated for a national network
by the US Environmental Protection Agency, and as is routinely needed
for air quality research studies. It is useful for providing gas/particle
partitioning data by identifying the source of evolved carbon as
either gas or stable particles or outgassing. This technology can
also be used for a variety of indoor air sampling and air cleaning
applications.
STATUS: Available for licensing
REFERENCE NUMBER: IB-903D
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CONTACT:
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Technology
Transfer Department
E.O. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
MS 90-1070
Berkeley, CA 94720
(510) 486-6467 FAX: (510) 486-6457
TTD@lbl.gov |
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