Ultraviolet photolytic vapor generation from particulate ensembles for detection of malathion residues in aerosols [An article from: Analytica Chimica Acta]
Book Details
PublisherElsevier
ISBN / ASINB000RR3FLW
ISBN-13978B000RR3FL3
MarketplaceUnited Kingdom 🇬🇧
Description
This digital document is a journal article from Analytica Chimica Acta, published by Elsevier in 2005. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Description:
A method to selectively generate vapor signatures from malathion entrained within matrices of surface-impacted aerosol particles has been demonstrated. The method uses ultraviolet radiation (172 or 222nm) from a continuous wave discharge lamp to photodissociate malathion molecules collected within and on surface-impacted particles, followed by detection via ion mobility spectrometry (IMS). Since surface heating does not occur, only those molecules whose photofragments exhibit high vapor pressure are introduced into the IMS instrument and then only those exhibiting high proton affinity are subsequently detected. This process produces less signal clutter than in pyrolysis-IMS, where the background aerosol is pyrolyzed along with the sample. Quantities of malathion as small as 50ng could be detected when the malathion was entrained on a clean surface, and as small as 100ng when co-entrained on a surface with much larger quantities of background aerosols such as diesel soot, road dust, Bacillus globigii, albumin, and cotton lint. This sensitivity indicates that, when combined with a particle collector as an effective pre-concentrator, detection of malathion aerosol concentrations of
Description:
A method to selectively generate vapor signatures from malathion entrained within matrices of surface-impacted aerosol particles has been demonstrated. The method uses ultraviolet radiation (172 or 222nm) from a continuous wave discharge lamp to photodissociate malathion molecules collected within and on surface-impacted particles, followed by detection via ion mobility spectrometry (IMS). Since surface heating does not occur, only those molecules whose photofragments exhibit high vapor pressure are introduced into the IMS instrument and then only those exhibiting high proton affinity are subsequently detected. This process produces less signal clutter than in pyrolysis-IMS, where the background aerosol is pyrolyzed along with the sample. Quantities of malathion as small as 50ng could be detected when the malathion was entrained on a clean surface, and as small as 100ng when co-entrained on a surface with much larger quantities of background aerosols such as diesel soot, road dust, Bacillus globigii, albumin, and cotton lint. This sensitivity indicates that, when combined with a particle collector as an effective pre-concentrator, detection of malathion aerosol concentrations of
