Abstract

Organic compounds that can be thermally desorbed from airborne particles change cohesively with time, providing information about sources, photochemical transformations and transport of aerosols. In the spring of 1985, 138 airborne particulate samples were collected at an urban site in Boulder, Colorado. Samples were collected by drawing approximately 300 ℓ of air, for 58 min, through a small glass tube containing a quartz fiber filter. Particles were subsequently analyzed by direct thermal desorption of volatile organic compounds into a gas Chromatographic column followed by separation and detection of compounds with flame ionization or mass spectrometry. Factor analysis on the concentrations of 42 organic compounds in 138 1-h samples with time and meteorology revealed characteristic chromatograms for photochemical activity, biological sources and motor vehicle sources. Organic compounds desorbed from particles include terpenoids from biogenic sources, alkanes from vehicular and biological sources and aldehydes, ketones, carboxylic acids, lactones and furans from photochemical transformations and other sources. Concentrations of oxygenated species increased on sunny days relative to cloudy days or nights. Terpenoid concentrations increased when the wind direction was from a forested region west of the sampling site. Odd carbon number n-alkanes increased as temperature increased with the progression of springtime.

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