1 research outputs found

    A Technique for Rapid Gas Chromatography Analysis Applied to Ambient Organic Aerosol Measurements from the Thermal Desorption Aerosol Gas Chromatograph (TAG)

    No full text
    <div><p>While automated techniques exist for the integration of individual gas chromatograph peaks, manual inspection of integration quality and peak choice is still required due to drifting retention times and changing peak shapes near detection limits. The feasibility of a simplified method to obtain multiple bulk species classes from complex gas chromatography data is investigated here with data from the thermal desorption aerosol gas chromatograph (TAG). Chromatograms were divided into many “chromatography bins” containing total eluting mass spectra (both from resolved species and unresolved complex mixture [UCM]), instead of only integrating resolved peaks as is performed in the traditional chromatography analysis method. Positive matrix factorization (PMF) was applied to the mass spectra of the chromatography bins to determine major factors contributing to the observed chemical composition. PMF factors are not highly sensitive to the specific PMF error estimation method applied. Increasing the number of chromatography bins that each chromatogram was divided into improved PMF results until reaching 400 bins. Increasing the number of bins above 400 does not significantly improve the PMF results. This is likely due to 400 bin separation providing bin widths (4.6 s) that match the narrowest peak widths (4.8 s) of compounds found in the TAG chromatograms. The bin-based method took only a small fraction of the time to complete compared to peak-integrated method, significantly saving operator time and effort. Finally, high-factor solutions (e.g., 20 factors) of bin-based PMF can separate many individual compounds, homologues compound series, and UCM from chromatography data.</p><p>Copyright 2014 American Association for Aerosol Research</p></div
    corecore