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Mining Publication: Effects of Sampling Artifacts on Occupational Samples of Diesel Particulate Matter

Original creation date: July 2008

Image of publication Effects of Sampling Artifacts on Occupational Samples of Diesel Particulate Matter

Total carbon (TC) is sometimes used to measure or characterize diesel particulate matter (DPM) in occupational settings such as underground mines. DPM samples are collected on quartz fiber filters. When using quartz fiber filters, adsorption of gas phase organic carbon (OC) has been reported, causing a positive bias in the particulate TIC results (adsorption artifact). Most of the data on the sampling artifacts and corrections apply to environmental air sampling, where samples are collected at a much higher filter face velocity and the OC concentrations are generally much lower relative to occupational sampling. In this study, we investigated the effects of adsorption artifact on samples from occupational settings. Samples were collected with and without denuders to determine the amount of gas phase OC collected and the accuracy of certain corrections. In underground stone mines, the adsorption artifact was found to positively bias the particulate TC by greater than 20% for filter loadings below 25 µg/cm2 TC (8-h time weighted average = 262 µg/m3). The tandem filter correction reduced the effect of the artifact, as high as 60% of the TC value, to less than 11% for laboratory data. It also significantly reduced the effect of the artifact obtained for field samples.

Authors: JD Noll, ME Birch

Peer Reviewed Journal Article - July 2008

NIOSHTIC2 Number: 20034218

Environ Sci Technol 2008 Jul; 42(14):5223-5228


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