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  4. Ambient aerosol composition by infrared spectroscopy and partial least-squares in the chemical speciation network: Organic carbon with functional group identification
 
research article

Ambient aerosol composition by infrared spectroscopy and partial least-squares in the chemical speciation network: Organic carbon with functional group identification

Weakley, Andrew T.
•
Takahama, Satoshi  
•
Dillner, Ann M.
2016
Aerosol Science and Technology

The Fourier-transform infrared (FT-IR) spectra of ambient fine aerosols were used with partial least-squares (PLS) regression to accurately, inexpensively, and nondestructively predict organic carbon (OC) on polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) filters in the U.S. Environmental Protection Agencies' Chemical Speciation Network (CSN). Recently, a similar FT-IR method was used for OC determination in the rural United States Interagency Monitoring of PROtected Visual Environments network, with the present work extending the method to urban aerosols with low mass loadings. In the present study, FT-IR spectra were calibrated to collocated thermal/optical reflectance (TOR) OC measurements following numerical processing with a second derivative filter, backward Monte Carlo unimportant variable elimination, and a quadratic discriminant analysis-PLS vapor correction routine. After processing and vapor correcting spectra, the number of model components (latent variables) were reduced from thirty-five to three with only the first PLS component patently predicting OC. The two lesser components modeled PTFE and inorganic interference remaining in the spectra. A wavenumber ranking procedure using both the variable importance in projection and bootstrapped confidence intervals underscored the primacy of aliphatic C-H stretches and carbonyl vibrations for OC prediction. Aliphatic deformations, amines, organonitrate, carboxylate, and aromatic vibrations were also valuable for OC quantification. This study demonstrates that PLS models quantifying TOR OC are explicable in terms of organic functional group absorption after judiciously processing FT-IR spectra.Copyright (c) 2016 American Association for Aerosol Research

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1080/02786826.2016.1217389
Web of Science ID

WOS:000386209700008

Author(s)
Weakley, Andrew T.
Takahama, Satoshi  
Dillner, Ann M.
Date Issued

2016

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Published in
Aerosol Science and Technology
Volume

50

Issue

10

Start page

1096

End page

1114

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
APRL  
Available on Infoscience
November 4, 2016
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/130933
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