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Air Sampling of Fragrance Compounds using the Automated GERSTEL Gas Sampling System (GSS)

Applications | 2014 | GERSTELInstrumentation
GC/MSD, Thermal desorption, GC/SQ
Industries
Environmental
Manufacturer
Agilent Technologies, GERSTEL

Summary

Significance of the Topic


This study addresses the quantification and temporal profiling of fragrance compounds released by aerosol air fresheners in indoor environments. Monitoring these volatile organic compounds (VOCs) is critical for product development, assessing efficacy over time, ensuring user safety, and guiding formulations that maintain desired scent profiles.

Objectives and Study Overview


The primary goals were to demonstrate automated active air sampling of fragrance VOCs using the GERSTEL GSS28 system, to develop and validate a method for linalool and limonene quantitation, and to track concentration decay curves for multiple compounds over a four-hour period in a controlled office space.

Instrumentation


Key analytical platforms and accessories:
  • GERSTEL GSS28 Field Portable Gas Sampling System (28‐position active sampler)
  • Tenax-TA sorbent tubes (TDU tubes) for VOC capture
  • GERSTEL MPS robotic sampler with Thermal Desorption Unit (TDU) option
  • GERSTEL CIS 4 cooled inlet with liquid nitrogen trap
  • Agilent 7890B GC coupled to 5977A mass selective detector (MSD)

Methodology


Air freshener aerosols were released in a 9′×13′ office with a 10′ ceiling. Sampling was performed at 25 mL/min for 20 minutes per tube (0.5 L total) on conditioned Tenax-TA tubes, at preprogrammed intervals spanning four hours. Headspace sorptive extraction (HSSE) with a PDMS Twister® was used to profile product composition. Thermal desorption was carried out in splitless mode (50 mL/min He, 280 °C, 3 min), followed by cryogenic trapping at –120 °C and transfer to the GC column (30 m Rxi®-5 MS) under split (10:1) conditions. MS full‐scan analysis (35–450 amu) enabled compound identification and quantitation.

Main Results and Discussion


HSSE chromatograms revealed consistent presence of linalool and limonene in all three products, with variations in relative abundance. Method validation for linalool and limonene showed recoveries of 98–123% and RSDs below 10%, with linear calibration (R2 = 1.000). Decay profiles indicated:
  • Linalool exhibited a rapid initial increase and gradual four-hour decline, falling below its odor threshold (~4.5 ng/L) after ~180 minutes.
  • Limonene and other esters (e.g., hexyl acetate, allyl heptanoate) demonstrated compound-specific decay rates, reflecting volatility and background sources.
  • Ethanol from the formulation was also successfully tracked, confirming the method’s suitability for very volatile analytes.

Benefits and Practical Applications


The automated GSS28 approach enables high-throughput, time-resolved sampling with minimal operator intervention. Key advantages include:
  • Quantitative monitoring of fragrance VOCs at ng/L levels.
  • Automated scheduling across up to 28 tubes for extended sampling events.
  • Applicability to product development, quality control, indoor air quality studies, and pharmacokinetic modeling of consumer aerosols.

Future Trends and Applications


Emerging directions may include integration of real-time GC–MS or portable MS systems for on-site analysis, use of mixed-bed sorbents to broaden analyte scope, coupling with sensor arrays and AI-driven data analytics for rapid odor profiling, and expanding to multi-room or dynamic airflow studies.

Conclusion


The GERSTEL GSS28 coupled with thermal desorption GC/MS provides a robust, precise, and automated workflow for tracking fragrance VOC concentrations over time. The validated method for linalool and limonene demonstrates excellent recovery and reproducibility, and the approach can be extended to a wide range of volatiles in indoor air and occupational settings.

Reference


[1] The Good Scents Company, fragrance compound odor thresholds and descriptors.

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