Abstract

Direct sampling mass spectrometry (DSMS) is an increasingly popular technique for rapid and sensitive measurement of organic pollutants in air, water, soil, and wastes. Detection limits are typically in the range of 1 ppb for volatile organic compounds (VOCs in water) with little or no sample preparation required and sample analysis times of less than 3 min. Despite the fast sample analysis time and consequent large sample throughput capability, there are numerous situations that would benefit from the ability to continuously monitor the concentration of targeted VOCs in real time. These include incinerator stack emissions, industrial wastewater streams, chemical process streams, vent emissions, exhaust emissions, groundwater and soil remediation process systems, waste-site off gas during remediation, fugitive emissions, hazardous workplace atmospheres, and soil gas analysis with the use of a dynamic depth profiling probe such as a cone penetrometer. During the past year, several pilot studies have been conducted with a DSMS field instrument for various real-time continuous monitoring applications. These studies have included the monitoring of VOCs in an incinerator stack, monitoring of VOCs in pilot-scale photolytic groundwater remediation systems, measurement of automobile exhaust in a moving vehicle, soil gas measurements in conjunction with a cone penetrometer, and in situ measurement of VOCs in groundwater with the use of a special sampling probe. In each instance, the DSMS instrument was configured with special sampling probes that extracted the VOCs from the sample matrix and transported them through an appropriate transfer line into a direct capillary restrictor interface to the ion trap. Targeted compounds were monitored based on unique peaks in the electron impact and proton transfer chemical ionization mass spectra. The real-time detection limits for VOCs in aqueous systems are in the range of 1 ppb, and in gaseous streams detection limits are in the range of approximately 10 ppb by volume. Temporal resolution ranges up to a maximum of 10 full-scan mass spectra per second, which provides the ability to monitor transient events in a sample stream that might be missed by discrete sample collection and analysis. © 1997 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Field Analyt Chem Technol 1: 251–276, 1997

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