Abstract
The use of passive air samplers (PAS) for semi-volatile organic compounds (SVOCs) continues to expand. To advance quantitative understanding of uptake kinetics, we calibrated the XAD-PAS, using a styrene-divinylbenzene sorbent, through a year-long side-by-side deployment with an active sampler. Twelve XAD-PASs, deployed in June 2020, were retrieved at 4-week intervals, while gas phase SVOCs were quantified in 48 consecutive week-long active samples taken from June 2020 to May 2021. Consistent with XAD's high uptake capacity, even relatively volatile SVOCs, such as hexachlorobutadiene, displayed linear uptake throughout the entire deployment. Sampling rates (SRs) range between 0.1 and 0.6 m3 day-1 for 26 SVOCs, including brominated flame retardants, organophosphate esters, and halogenated methoxylated benzenes. SRs are compared with experimental SRs reported previously. The ability of the existing mechanistic uptake model PAS-SIM to reproduce the observed uptake and SRs was evaluated. Agreement between simulated and measured uptake curves was reasonable but varied with compound volatility and the assumed stagnant air layer boundary thickness. Even though PAS-SIM succeeds in predicting the SR range for the studied SVOCs, it fails to capture the volatility dependence of the SR by underestimating the length of the linear uptake period and by failing to consider the kinetics of sorption.
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