Abstract
Monitoring campaigns were made during summer 2006 in urban and forest areas of Northern Algeria. Airborne particulates were collected daily by using medium-volume aspirating systems equipped with PM10 inertial impactors. The organic fraction was extracted with soxhlet, fractioned and cleaned-up through chromatography column on alumina, then processed by gas chromatography combined with flame ionization and mass spectrometry detectors. Chemical analyses allowed to characterize a set of groups of compounds, namely n-alkanes, n-alkanoic acids, dicarboxylic acids, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), nitrated polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (NPAHs), and highly-polar chemicals including caffeine, nicotine and oxygenated-PAHs. Besides that, the potential sources of pollution were investigated by analyzing the n-alkane carbon preference index (CPI) and selected diagnostic ratios among PAH and NPAH concentrations. Total concentrations of n-alkanes varied from 48 to 100ngm−3 over the entire period, those of PAHs from 1.9 to 3.5ngm−3. Despite their recognized semi-volatile properties both caffeine and nicotine, identified respectively as tracers of recreational drink and tobacco smoke, reached high concentrations in the air along all period investigated. In particular, they accounted together for ∼12% of all identified PM components in the Rouiba urban area.
Published Version
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