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Development and Evaluation of a High-Volume Aerosol-into-Liquid Collector for Fine and Ultrafine Particulate Matter
Authors:Dongbin Wang  Payam Pakbin  Arian Saffari  Martin M. Shafer  James J. Schauer  Constantinos Sioutas
Affiliation:1. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering , University of Southern California , Los Angeles , California , USA;2. Environmental Chemistry and Technology Program, University of Wisconsin-Madison , Madison , Wisconsin , USA;3. Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene, University of Wisconsin-Madison , Madison , Wisconsin , USA
Abstract:This study presents a novel high-volume aerosol-into-liquid collector, developed to provide concentrated slurries of fine and/or ultrafine particulate matter (PM) to be used for unattended, in situ measurements of PM chemistry and toxicity. This system operates at 200 liters per minute (L/min) flow and utilizes the saturation–condensation, particle-to-droplet growth component of the versatile aerosol concentration enrichment system (VACES), growing fine or ultrafine PM to 3–4-μm droplets, in conjunction with a newly designed impactor, in which grown particles are collected gradually forming highly concentrated slurries. Laboratory evaluation results indicated an excellent overall system collection efficiency (over 90%) for both monodisperse and polydisperse particles in the range of 0.01 to 2 μm. Field evaluations illustrated that overall a very good agreement was obtained for most PM2.5 species between the new aerosol collection system and the VACES/BioSampler tandem as well as filter samplers operating in parallel. Very good agreement between the new system and the VACES/BioSampler was also observed for reactive oxygen species (ROS) in ambient PM2.5 samples, whereas lower ROS values were obtained from the water extracts of the filter, likely due to incomplete extraction of water insoluble redox active species collected on the filter substrate. Moreover, the field tests indicated that the new aerosol collection system could achieve continuous and unattended collection of concentrated suspensions for at least 2 to 3 days without any obvious shortcomings in its operation. Both laboratory and field evaluations of the high-volume aerosol-into-liquid collector suggest that this system is an effective technology for collection and characterization of ambient aerosols.

Copyright 2013 American Association for Aerosol Research
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