Abstract
Volatile organic compounds can contribute to the failure of electronic equipment in both switching offices and data centers. They can also be useful indicators of ventilation needs. Only within the past decade have ambient concentrations of volatile organics been measured routinely. In standard sampling approach, a pump is used to pull a known volume of air through an adsorbent. This study examines a sampling procedure that does not use a pump, but instead depends on molecular diffusion for eventual contact between the vapor phase compounds and the charcoal sorbent (passive sampling). The technique is both simpler and less expensive than active sampling with a pump. This method has been validated for low-level sampling over extended time intervals. This study demonstrates that collected amounts vary linearly with airborne concentrations for sampling intervals in excess of four weeks: even after eight weeks of sampling at typical ambient concentrations, the amount of material collected does not approach th...
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