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Monitoring 57 Ozone Precursors in Ambient Air

Applications |  | SCION InstrumentsInstrumentation
GC/MSD, GC/SQ
Industries
Environmental
Manufacturer
SCION Instruments

Summary

Importance of the Topic


Ozone in the lower atmosphere is formed when nitrogen oxides (NOx), carbon monoxide (CO) and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) react under sunlight, creating smog that harms human health and ecosystems. Monitoring the 57 specified non-methane hydrocarbons (C2–C12) provides critical data for air quality management and regulatory compliance in Photochemical Assessment Monitoring Stations (PAMS).

Objectives and Study Overview


This application note describes a single-injection gas chromatography method for quantifying 57 ozone precursors in ambient air. The primary goals were to develop a robust calibration strategy, achieve high linearity and precision, and demonstrate applicability for routine PAMS monitoring.

Methodology


Ambient air samples were collected in stainless steel tanks and spiked with internal standards. A Dean switch split the sample flow, directing C2–C3 compounds to a flame ionization detector (FID) and C4–C12 compounds to a mass spectrometer (MS) in one injection. Sample preconcentration and cryogenic cooling improved detection sensitivity.

Used Instrumentation


  • Scion 456 Gas Chromatograph with split/splitless injector and Dean switch
  • Liquid nitrogen cooling column module (Scion Plot Q and Scion-1MS columns)
  • Flame Ionization Detector (FID, 250 °C)
  • Scion Mass Spectrometer (full scan 30–300 amu, ion source 250 °C)
  • Atmospheric preconcentrator, dilution and tank cleaning devices
  • Concentrator autosampler and stainless steel sample tanks

Main Results and Discussion


Calibration standards across 1.25–20 nmol/mol with internal standards produced linear curves for all 57 compounds (R2 > 0.997, most > 0.999). Representative compounds (isobutane, 1-pentene, benzene, styrene, o-xylene, dodecane) confirmed excellent linearity. Repeatability assessed by five consecutive injections of a 5 nmol/mol standard showed consistent chromatographic profiles and reliable quantification for both detectors.

Benefits and Practical Applications


  • Single-injection method streamlines analysis and reduces sample handling.
  • Dual-detector configuration extends quantification from C2 to C12 compounds.
  • High sensitivity and broad linear range meet regulatory requirements for PAMS sites.
  • Demonstrated repeatability supports routine environmental monitoring and quality assurance.

Future Trends and Possibilities


Future developments may integrate high-resolution MS for improved isomer differentiation, automated calibration and validation workflows, and portable preconcentration modules. Coupling analytical data with advanced informatics and machine learning could enhance source apportionment and provide near-real-time air quality forecasting.

Conclusion


The GC–FID–MS method with a Dean switch offers an efficient, accurate approach for simultaneous quantification of 57 ozone precursors in ambient air. It delivers exceptional linearity, precision and repeatability in a single analytical run.

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