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Multisorbent tubes for collecting volatile organic compounds in spacecraft airThe sampling capability of Tenax-TA tubes, used in the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's solid sorbent air sampler to trap and concentrate contaminants from air aboard spacecraft, was improved by incorporating two sorbents within the tubes. Existing tubes containing only Tenax-TA allowed highly volatile compounds to "break through" during collection of a 1.5 L air sample. First the carbon molecular sieve-type sorbents Carboxen 569 and Carbosieve S-III were tested for their ability to quantitatively trap the highly volatile compounds. Breakthrough volumes were determined with the direct method, whereby low ppm levels of methanol or Freon 12 in nitrogen were flowed through the sorbent tubes at 30 mL/min, and breakthrough was detected by gas chromatography. Breakthrough volumes for methanol were about 9 L/g on Carboxen 569 and 11 L/g on Carbosieve S-III; breakthrough volumes for Freon 12 were about 7 L/g on Carboxen 569 and > 26 L/g on Carbosieve S-III. Next, dual-bed tubes containing either Tenax-TA/Carbosieve S-III, Tenax-TA/Carboxen 569, or Carbotrap/Carboxen 569 to a 10-component gas mixture were exposed, in dry and in humidified air (50% relative humidity), and percentage recoveries of each compound were determined. The Tenax-TA/Carboxen 569 combination gave the best overall recoveries (75-114% for the 10 compounds). Acetaldehyde had the lowest recovery (75%) of the 10 compounds, but this value was still an improvement over either the other two sorbent combinations or the original single-sorbent tubes.
Document ID
20040141600
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Matney, M. L.
(Wyle Laboratories, Life Sciences Systems and Services Inc., Houston, TX 77058, United States)
Beck, S. W.
Limero, T. F.
James, J. T.
Date Acquired
August 22, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 2000
Publication Information
Publication: AIHAJ : a journal for the science of occupational and environmental health and safety
Volume: 61
Issue: 1
ISSN: 1529-8663
Subject Category
Environment Pollution
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other
Keywords
NASA Center JSC
NASA Discipline Environmental Health

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