4.3 Article

On the use of Tedlar® bags for breath-gas sampling and analysis

Journal

JOURNAL OF BREATH RESEARCH
Volume 2, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1752-7155/2/4/046001

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Funding

  1. Center of Excellence in Medicine and IT (CEMIT
  2. formerly Kompetenzzentrum Medizin Tirol, KMT, Innsbruck, Austria)

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The storage capability of Tedlar (R) bags for gaseous compounds was assessed using on-line proton-transfer-reaction mass spectrometry (PTR-MS). Sample bags were filled with a mixture of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) at known quantities in the ppbv range. The test gas included alcohol, nitrile, aldehyde, ketone, terpene and aromatic compounds. PTR-MS enabled frequent bag-direct measurements of compound abundances over a 70 h storage period. Concentrations of all compounds decreased with bag storage time, with compound-specific decay rates. The most rapid decline in concentration levels was seen for water vapour in the bag, i.e. sample humidity. Such a decrease is particularly relevant for breath-gas samples, where water vapour content is high. Compound losses were attributed to a combination of adsorption to and diffusion through the bag walls. Storage property observations suggest that sample analyses made within 10 h of sampling offer adequate sample authenticity replication. Based on observations, an appropriate bag-cleaning procedure was established and assessed. Results indicated that acceptable bag cleanliness for breath-gas sampling is achievable.

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