4.6 Article

A portable gas chromatograph for real-time monitoring of aromatic volatile organic compounds in air samples

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHROMATOGRAPHY A
Volume 1625, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.chroma.2020.461267

Keywords

Portable gas chromatograph; Ambient air carrier gas; Electronic pressure control; Preconcentrator; Photo ionization detector

Funding

  1. Wonkwang University

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We describe the design and performance evaluation of a portable gas chromatograph suitable for the analysis of volatile organic and odorous compounds at trace levels. The system comprises a carbon nanotube sponge preconcentrator, an electronic pressure control (EPC) unit, a temperature-programmable column module, and a fast-response photoionization detector. A built-in tablet computer controls instrumental parameters and chromatogram display functions. The compact GC with dimensions of 35 cm (1) x 26 cm (w) x 15 cm (h) is self-contained, weighing less than 5 kg without a battery pack, and uses no auxiliary compressed gases. Our design has three main advantages over conventional portable GCs: recharging configuration of ambient air as the carrier gas using a miniature diaphragm pump, precise control of column flow by the built-in canister and EPC system, and rapid thermal desorption of the preconcentrator facilitated by intrinsic resistivity of the carbon nanotube sponge. A 30 m, 0.28 mm I.D. capillary column operated at a head pressure of 14 psi provided a peak capacity of 55 for a 10 min isothermal analysis. The temperature-programmability feature could decrease the analysis time of less than 5 min for vapor mixture of benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, and o-xylene. More than a 100-fold increase in sensitivity by preconcentrating a sample adsorption volume of 90 mL resulted in improved detection limits of 0.13 (benzene), 0.20 (toluene), 0.23 (ethylbenzene), and 0.28 (o-xylene) ppb (v/v). Our instrument displayed good stability and reproducibility of retention times (< 0.14% RSD) and intensities (< 4.5% RSD) for continuous measurements using the preconcentrator over 10 h. Thus, continuous and on-site determinations of trace volatile organic compounds in air samples with this instrument appear feasible. (C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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