Printer Friendly
The Free Library
5,675,956 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

A critical evaluation of interlaboratory data on total, elemental, and isotopic carbon in the carbonaceous particle reference material, NIST SRM 1649a.


Because of increased interest in the marine and atmospheric sciences in elemental carbon (EC), or black carbon (BC) or soot carbon (SC), and because of the difficulties in analyzing or even defining this pervasive component of particulate carbon, it has become quite important to have appropriate reference materials for intercomparison and quality control. The NIST (National Institute of Standards & Technology, Washington, DC, www.nist.gov) The standards-defining agency of the U.S. government, formerly the National Bureau of Standards. It is one of three agencies that fall under the Technology Administration (www.technology.  "urban dust" Standard Reference Material[R] SRM (1) (Storage Resource Management) The management of the storage resources in an organization in order to avoid duplication of files and to determine space utilization across all servers.  1649a is useful in this respect, in part because it comprises a considerable array of inorganic and organic species and because it exhibits a large degree of ([C.sup.14]) isotopic heterogeneity, with biomass carbon source contributions ranging from about 2 % (essentially fossil aliphatic aliphatic /al·i·phat·ic/ (al?i-fat´ik) pertaining to any member of one of the two major groups of organic compounds, those with a straight or branched chain structure.

al·i·phat·ic
adj.
 fraction) to about 32 % (polar fraction).

A primary purpose of this report is to provide documentation for the new isotopic and chemical particulate carbon data for the most recent (31 Jan. 2001) SRM 1649a Certificate of Analysis. Supporting this is a critical review of underlying international intercomparison data and methodologies, provided by 18 teams of analytical experts from 11 institutions. Key results of the intercomparison are: (1) a new, Certified Value for total carbon (TC) in SRM 1649a; (2) [C.sup.14] Reference Values ref·er·ence values
pl.n.
A set of laboratory test values obtained from an individual or from a group in a defined state of health.
 for total carbon and a number of organic species, including for the first time 8 individual PAHs; and (3) elemental carbon (EC) Information Values derived from 13 analytical methods applied to this component. Results for elemental carbon, which comprised a special focus of the intercomparison, were quite diverse, reflecting the confounding confounding

when the effects of two, or more, processes on results cannot be separated, the results are said to be confounded, a cause of bias in disease studies.


confounding factor
 of methodological-matrix artifacts artifacts

see specimen artifacts.
, and methods that tended to probe more or less refractory regions of this universal, but ill-defined product of incomplete combustion. Availability of b oth chemical and [C.sup.14] speciation speciation

Formation of new and distinct species, whereby a single evolutionary line splits into two or more genetically independent ones. One of the fundamental processes of evolution, speciation may occur in many ways.
 data for SRM 1649a holds great promise for improved analytical insight through comparative analysis (e.g., fossil/ biomass partition in EC compared to PAH PAH, PAHA aminohippuric acid.

PAH
abbr.
para-aminohippuric acid


PAH 1 Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon, see there 2. Pulmonary artery HTN
), and through application of the principle of isotopic mass balance.

Key words: [C.sup.14] speciation; elemental carbon; fossil and biomass carbon; international intercomparison; SRM 1649a; total carbon certified value.

1. Introduction and Overview

What began as an informal exchange of particulate carbon data for SRM 1649a among just a few cooperating laboratories grew into a proper international intercomparison, the results of which are presented here. The focus of the initial work, as well as the ultimate product, was the characterization of the NIST Urban Dust Standard Reference Material (SRM) 1649a for isotopic and particulate carbon--especially [C.sup.14] and "elemental" and total carbon (EC, TC).

An initial driving force for our efforts was the impending im·pend  
intr.v. im·pend·ed, im·pend·ing, im·pends
1. To be about to occur: Her retirement is impending.

2.
 re-certification and re-issue of the original urban dust SRM 1649 as SRM 1649a. The "new" SRM is, in fact, derived from the same batch of urban dust resulting from the massive collection in Washington, DC during 1976-1977 (1). SRM 1649a, which is a new, repackaged batch of SRM 1649, includes data for new measurands as well as more extensive and more precise data on previously certified measurands (2). The subsequent chain of events leading to the expanded intercomparison included: (1) a special forum ("Symposium on Black Carbon in the Environment") at the August 1999 Goldschmidt Conference at Harvard University Harvard University, mainly at Cambridge, Mass., including Harvard College, the oldest American college. Harvard College


Harvard College, originally for men, was founded in 1636 with a grant from the General Court of the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
 (3); (2) cooperative efforts between NIST and SRI International (company) SRI International - One of the world's largest contract research firms. Founded in 1946 in conjuction with Stanford University as the Stanford Research Institute, they later became fully independent and were incorporated as a non-profit organisation under U.S.  to produce a prototype "filter" reference material from the bulk SRM (4); and (3) contemporaneous con·tem·po·ra·ne·ous  
adj.
Originating, existing, or happening during the same period of time: the contemporaneous reigns of two monarchs. See Synonyms at contemporary.
 BC intercomparisons of representative ambient and source samples for the atmospheric sciences (5-7) and geosciences (8). As a result, the initial SRM 1649a particulate carbon intercom parison par´i`son

n. 1. (Glassworking) An intermediate stage or shape of a glass object which is produced in more than one stage.
 gained significant breadth of perspective and participation. An added, very important outcome of the Black Carbon Symposium was the birth of the international Steering Committee steer·ing committee
n.
A committee that sets agendas and schedules of business, as for a legislative body or other assemblage.


steering committee
Noun
 for Black Carbon (BC) Reference Materials (9). The BC Steering Committee has expanded the search for and characterization of suitable BC reference materials to meet multi-discliplinary needs.

Black carbon intercomparisons, and consequent nomenclature issues, are not new. Already at the 1980 Conference on "Particulate Carbon: Atmospheric Life Cycle" in Warren, Michigan Warren is a city in Macomb County in the U.S. state of Michigan. As of the 2000 census, the city had a total population of 138,247, making Warren the largest city in Macomb County, the third most populous city in Michigan, and Metro Detroit's largest suburb. , the importance of intercomparisons for assessing BC measurement difficulties was represented in the presentation of Cadle and Groblicki (10), and it was noted that these difficulties were "further complicated by inconsistencies, redundancies, and contradictions in nomenclature ... (and) unique operational terminology ..." with particulate carbon descriptors including "elemental carbon ... apparent elemental carbon, soot, dry soot, nonvolatile carbon, nonsoluble carbon, absorbing carbon, residual carbon, and total noncarbonate/nonvolatile carbon" (11). Following the usage in the Certificate of Analysis for SRM 1649a, we have adopted for this intercomparison the generic term "elemental carbon" (EC) to represent results of methods designed to measure various manifestations of the metaphorical "black carbon spectrum."

1.1 Teams vs Laboratories

A Conventional treatment of interlaboratory comparisons identifies results according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 which "laboratory" provided the results in question. Such an identifier is reasonable and convenient when there is 1:1 correspondence between individuals (or organizations) providing the data. In the present intercomparison however, in several cases different individuals from a given laboratory, or even from different laboratories, would "team up" to generate results for a given analyte by a certain method. We have decided therefore to identify providers of specific results as Teams. (See Appendix 2.)

2. Intercomparison Materials; Measurands

2.1 Urban Dust (1649a) Bulk Standard Reference Material

The basic material of this intercomparison is the bulk (powder) urban dust reference material that resulted from a massive atmospheric sampling effort that took place in the Washington, DC Navy Yard during approximately a year's period, in 1976-1977. Quoting from the SRM 1649a Certificate of Analysis: "While the sample is not intended to be representative of the area in which it was collected, it should generally typify atmospheric particulate matter particulate matter
n. Abbr. PM
Material suspended in the air in the form of minute solid particles or liquid droplets, especially when considered as an atmospheric pollutant.

Noun 1.
 obtained from an urban area. The particulate material was removed from the baghouse filter bags by a specially designed vacuum cleaner vacuum cleaner, mechanical device using a draft of air to remove dust, loose dirt, or other particulate matter from dry surfaces. It is especially useful on highly textured surfaces, such as carpets and upholstery, that are difficult to clean by wiping or brushing.  and combined into a single lot. This lot was passed through a 125 [micro]m (120 mesh) sieve to remove bag fibers and other extraneous ex·tra·ne·ous  
adj.
1. Not constituting a vital element or part.

2. Inessential or unrelated to the topic or matter at hand; irrelevant. See Synonyms at irrelevant.

3.
 materials. The sieved material was then thoroughly mixed in a V-blender and bottled." A very large amount of material was collected, [approximately equal to] 20 kg. This has allowed the "Washington" urban dust to be broadly characterized by a number of teams (laboratories), and it guarantees a supp ly large enough to capitalize on Cap´i`tal`ize on`   

v. t. 1. To turn (an opportunity) to one's advantage; to take advantage of (a situation); to profit from; as, to capitalize on an opponent's mistakes s>.
 the detailed characterization for a number of years to come.

Among the principal SRM 1649a measurands, we find: polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon
n.
Any of a class of carcinogenic organic molecules that consist of three or more rings containing carbon and hydrogen and that are commonly produced by fossil fuel combustion.
 (PAH), polychlorinated biphenyls polychlorinated biphenyls, (pol´ēklôr´nā´tid bīfē´n  and chlorinated chlorinated /chlo·ri·nat·ed/ (klor´i-nat?ed) treated or charged with chlorine.

chlorinated

charged with chlorine.


chlorinated acids
some, e.g.
 pesticides, polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins and dibenzofurans, a series of 32 inorganic constituents, and special physical and biological characteristics: particle size Particle size, also called grain size, refers to the diameter of individual grains of sediment, or the lithified particles in clastic rocks. The term may also be applied to other granular materials.  and mutagenic mutagenic

inducing genetic mutation.
 activity, respectively. Another measurand, having specific relevance to the present intercomparison, is carbonate carbon. Early measurements gave an information value of about 0.0012 (mass fraction) of this constituent,(1) This represents less than 0.7 % of the total carbon (TC); hence for this material, the TC may be taken as the sum of the organic (OC) and elemental carbon (EC) to within 1 %. (This sum is designated by some workers as "total organic carbon" (TOC).) The small relative abundance of carbonate carbon in SRM 1649a has the fortunate consequence of minimizing certain artifacts associated with "thermal" methods of OC/EC analysis, where carbonate carbon can be misconstrued as EC. (2)

Small sample heterogeneity is an issue that must be considered both in the utilization of SRM 1649a as a reference material, and in the interpretation of intercomparison data where sample sizes may differ among methods or among teams. Although the material was "thoroughly mixed in a V--blender" prior to bottling, it does not necessarily follow that it is homogeneous at, e.g., the microgram microgram /mi·cro·gram/ (µg) (mi´kro-gram) one millionth (10-6) of a gram.

mi·cro·gram
n.
Abbr.
 scale; nor can one make the assumption that heterogeneity is independent of analyte. Given the assumption of randomness, however, the "Ingamells' constant" approach might be used to extrapolate extrapolate - extrapolation  from larger to smaller sample sizes (13). Some of the data having relevance to SRM 1649a heterogeneity are as follows: (1) For PAH: the analysis of subsamples ranging from 1 mg to 400 mg showed no significant differences in PAH concentrations, and a limit of 1 % was stated for heterogeneity error for sample sizes of 450 mg for PAHs having certified values. (2) Inorganic constituents were determined on duplicates having sample masses of 100 mg or 250 mg. (3) TC was determined at NIST on 0.3 mg to 9 mg portions without evidence of heterogeneity. (4) TC was determined by Team l0 on 0.3 mg to 1.5 mg portions with no evidence of a trend. (5) Yields of EC ("soot carbon") obtained by Team 4 on three 25 mg (nominal) portions of the SRM showed = 10 % relative standard deviation In probability theory and statistics, the Relative Standard Deviation (RSD or %RSD) refers to the absolute value of the coefficient of variation expressed as a percentage.

It is widely used in analytical chemistry to express the precision of an assay.

l
 (rsd), which is therefore an upper limit for the heterogeneity component. This EC variability, however, is trivial compared to the range of EC/TC results which exceeds a factor of seven. Points 1-3, above, derive from Ref. (2); points 4 and 5 derive from this intercomparison.

Sample heterogeneity as discussed above refers to the bulk SRM. The prototype filter reference material (RM), to be discussed immediately below, is more problematic. Total amounts were generally small (about 3 mg to 5 mg per filter), and in many cases only a fraction of the filter was subjected to analysis. For example, thermal--optical (TC, EC) methods generally used a few 0.5 [cm.sup.2] to 1.5 [cm.sup.2] punches from 37 mm (diameter) filters. Thus, intrinsic heterogeneity of the bulk SRM is confounded with possible filter mass loading variations.

2.2 Prototype Filter Reference Material

Optical and thermal--optical methods of EC analysis depend on transmission or reflectance re·flec·tance  
n.
The ratio of the total amount of radiation, as of light, reflected by a surface to the total amount of radiation incident on the surface.

Noun 1.
 measurements, and yield results that are expressed in units of [micro].g/[cm.sup.2]. Such methods require uniform deposits of the SRM, with known loadings. Also, to avoid optical saturation effects, such loadings must be limited to no more than about 10 [micro] EC/[cm.sup.2] (14). As a first step to develop an urban dust filter SRM, Klouda and coworkers prepared a set of prototype quartz filters, having uniform deposits of the bulk SRM 1649a. The prototype RM ("ACG ACG American College of Gastroenterology; angiocardiography; apexcardiogram.
AcG accelerator globulin (coagulation factor V).

AcG

accelerator globulin (clotting factor V).
 series") was prepared by depositing the Urban Dust onto pre--weighed 37 mm (diam.) quartz filters, using a special chamber that provided for re-suspension of the bulk SRM in air [4].

Subsequent (unpublished) work by Klouda and colleagues have set some bounds for intra- and inter--filter heterogeneity for chemical elements. For carbon, the thermal (not thermal--optical) method of Cachier, Bremond, and Buat-Menard (15), applied by Team 10 gave TC results of 0.181 g/g for one of the prototype filters, and 0.1760 g/g ([micro] = 0.0029, n = 4) for the bulk SRM. The relative difference (2.8 %) is not statistically significant. (The certified TC value for the bulk SRM 1649a is 0.1768 g/g (U= 0.0019). Note that the symbols [micro] and U represent standard uncertainties and expanded uncertainties, respectively [16].) The corresponding Team 10 results for EC/TC were 0.385 (filter) and 0.347 (bulk SRM). Note that these results do not reflect intra-filter heterogeneity or average mass loading inaccuracy in·ac·cu·ra·cy  
n. pl. in·ac·cu·ra·cies
1. The quality or condition of being inaccurate.

2. An instance of being inaccurate; an error.
, since the entire filter (in halves See In half ) was used in the analysis, and the total mass loading (mg) was known. Because of difficulties of estimating mass loading (mg SRM/[cm.sup.2]) and its variability on the 0.5 [cm.sup.2] to 1.5 [cm.sup.2] scale--needed for the thermal-optical methods--we have chosen to draw intercomparison TC data strictly from measurements on the bulk SRM. Values for EC/TC, however, are derived from both bulk and filter sample measurements. For the former, these are given directly by the ratio of the two concentration estimates; for the prototype filter RM, EC/TC is given by the average for the specific punch areas measured. The (filter EC/TC) values should be resistant to loading inaccuracies and variability, to the extent that EC and TC are similarly distributed.

2.3 Carbon Isotopes

This intercomparison is the first such exercise to involve both chemical and [C.sup.14] isotopic speciation of a Standard Reference Material. The importance of the isotopic component of the exercise derives from the fact that the SRM represents a "natural matrix" having both fossil and biomass components. Thus, there are opportunities to investigate relations between chemical (carbonaceous car·bo·na·ceous  
adj.
Consisting of, containing, relating to, or yielding carbon.


carbonaceous
Adjective

of, resembling, or containing carbon

Adj. 1.
) species and carbon isotopes ([C.sup.13], [C.sup.14]), on the one hand, and to test for isotopic-chemical mass balance, on the other. In the present case, that balance has not yet been achieved, meaning that there are important chemical species and related particulate carbon sources that have not been accounted for. Thus, the intercomparison represents more than an exercise in quality metrology; it has also a fundamental isotopic geochemistry geochemistry, study of the chemical changes on the earth. More specifically, it is the study of the absolute and relative abundances of chemical elements in the minerals, soils, ores, rocks, water, and atmosphere of the earth and the distribution and movement of  research component.

Speciation of naturally-occurring carbon isotopes ([C.sup.13], [C.sup.14]) adds a new dimension to this intercomparison. Certification of the atmospheric reference material for [C.sup.14] is vital for the control of accelerator mass spectrometry accelerator mass spectrometry
n.
Mass spectroscopy in which a particle accelerator is used to disassociate molecules, ionize atoms, and accelerate the ions.
 (AMS AMS - Andrew Message System ) measurements of "soot" and particulate carbon in the atmosphere, where the resulting data provides direct quantification of contributing fossil and biomass carbon components of the species measured. When considered in combination with complementary chemical information, the isotopic data results in a level of metrological insight and quality control that would not otherwise be available. A case in point is the multivariate relationship involving chemical and isotopic characterization of the combustion tracers Tracers

Refers to investment trusts which are populated by corporate bonds. In October 2001, Morgan Stanley's Tradable Custodial Receipts (Tracers) was launched. Tracers contain a number of coporate bonds and credit default swaps which are selected for liquidity and diversity.
, EC and PAH. A second, vital contribution of the carbon isotopes to the quality of the overall characterization of SRM 1649a particulate carbon, is the assessment of isotopic mass balance--i.e., the justification of the [C.sup.14] ([C.sup.13]) composition o f the total particulate carbon (TC), in terms of the sum of the concentration-weighted [C.sup.14] values of the major carbonaceous species. (3)

2.3.1 [C.sup.14] Reference Values: Fraction of Modern Carbon, [f.sub.M]

The basic measure for natural [C.sup.14] is [f.sub.M], the fraction of modern carbon. This is defined by reference to the international standard for radiocarbon dating radiocarbon dating
n.
The determination of the approximate age of an ancient object, such as an archaeological specimen, by measuring the amount of carbon 14 it contains. Also called carbon dating, carbon-14 dating.
. The [f.sub.M] value is derived from the [C.sup.14]/[C.sup.12] ratio observed, relative to 0.95 times that of the international (oxalic acid oxalic acid (ŏksăl`ĭk) or ethanedioic acid (ĕth'āndīōĭk), HO2CCO2 ) standard, SRM 4990B. The original basis for the reference state for natural radiocarbon ra·di·o·car·bon  
n.
A radioactive isotope of carbon, especially carbon 14.


radiocarbon
Noun

a radioactive isotope of carbon, esp.
 ([f.sub.M] = 1) was the need to provide a "zero" for the radiocarbon dating time scale. The objective was to define a reference state ([C.sup.14]/[C.sup.12] ratio or the equivalent radioactivity radioactivity, spontaneous disintegration or decay of the nucleus of an atom by emission of particles, usually accompanied by electromagnetic radiation. The energy produced by radioactivity has important military and industrial applications.  concentration) that would reflect the value of the living biosphere biosphere, irregularly shaped envelope of the earth's air, water, and land encompassing the heights and depths at which living things exist. The biosphere is a closed and self-regulating system (see ecology), sustained by grand-scale cycles of energy and of , prior to [C.sup.14] dilution from the injection of fossil carbon beginning with the industrial revolution, or the enormous enhancement resulting from atmospheric nuclear testing Nuclear tests are experiments carried out to determine the effectiveness, yield and explosive capability of nuclear weapons. Throughout the twentieth century, most nations that have developed nuclear weapons have staged tests of them. . The original reference artifact A distortion in an image or sound caused by a limitation or malfunction in the hardware or software. Artifacts may or may not be easily detectable. Under intense inspection, one might find artifacts all the time, but a few pixels out of balance or a few milliseconds of abnormal sound  was "1890 wood," but this was replaced in the mid-20th century by the (then) NBS (National Bureau of Standards) See NIST.

NBS - National Bureau of Standards: part of the US Department of Commerce, now NIST.
 SRM 4990B (oxalic acid dihydrate), which had a [C.sup.14] radioactivit y concentration in AD 1950 that was about 5 % greater than the previous (1890 wood) artifact. This, and its intercalibrated successor (oxalic acid SRM 4990C), has remained the primary standard for natural [C.sup.14] in applications ranging from radiocarbon dating to isotope geochemistry Isotope geochemistry is an aspect of geology based upon study of the relative and absolute concentrations of the elements and their isotopes in the Earth. Broadly, the field is divided into two branches: stable and radiogenic isotope geochemistry. . Although SRM 4990B remains the primary standard for these applications, laboratory measurements have shown the reference value ([f.sub.M] = 1) to be equivalent to approximately 13.6 disintegrations [min.sup.-1] [g.sup.-1] carbon ([approximately equal to] 230 Bq/kg) (18).

For detailed information on the definition of [f.sub.M], taking into account adjustment for the [C.sup.13]/[C.sup.12] ratio (for precise work) see Stuiver and Polach (19) and Hut (20). Note that all [f.sub.M] values are corrected for [C.sup.14] decay to the mid-date of sampling (1977.0 for SRM 1649a) using the physical half life: 5730 a. Corrections are quite small for the measurements, which were made between 1983 and 1999, with correction factors ranging from 1.00073 to 1.00273. Note that [f.sub.M] reflects the [C.sup.14] content compared to the artifactually defined "modern" reference state (based on SRM 4990B). At the time of collection of SRM 1649a (1976-1977) the [C.sup.14] content of the living biosphere was approximately 1.35 X Modern as a result of atmospheric nuclear testing (21).

2.3.2 Fossil and Biomass Carbon; Isotopic Heterogeneity

For reference materials derived entirely from fossil or biomass sources, [C.sup.14] speciation data would be of little interest, since all chemical components would be "living" or "dead." For SRM 1649a, however, where only about 40 % of the carbon, on average, is biogenic biogenic /bi·o·gen·ic/ (-jen´ik) having origins in biological processes.

biogenic

having the property of originating in a biological process.
, there is a wealth of information contained in the varying contributions of fossil and biomass sources to different chemical species, as well as the aforementioned opportunity to use isotopic mass balance for an extra measure of quality control.

As indicated in Sec. 2.3.1, reference values for [C.sup.14] abundances in the chemical species are defined in terms of [f.sub.M], the fraction of modern carbon. These are the values that comprise the outcome of the intercomparison, and the values that appear on the Certificate of Analysis of the urban dust standard reference material. Fossil and biomass carbon fractions, which have special importance for source apportionment The process by which legislative seats are distributed among units entitled to representation; determination of the number of representatives that a state, county, or other subdivision may send to a legislative body. The U.S. , may be derived from the [f.sub.M] values, by taking into account the time-dependent [C.sup.14] content of the living biosphere. For the reference date (average sampling date) for SRM 1649a (1977.0), the [C.sup.14]/[C.sup.12] ratio of the living biosphere was enhanced by a factor of 1.35 as a result of excess [C.sup.14] produced by atmospheric nuclear testing. The excess reached a peak in the mid-1960s with more than a doubling of [CO.sub.2.sup.14] in the northern troposphere troposphere: see atmosphere.
troposphere

Lowest region of the atmosphere, bounded by the Earth below and the stratosphere above, with the upper boundary being about 6–8 mi (10–13 km) above the Earth's surface.
. Since the cessation of nuclear testing in the atmosphere, biogeochemical relaxation has been manifest as the "bio mass [C.sup.14] decay curve" that links the tail of the nuclear testing input function with the year of biomass growth.

The complete (northern hemisphere) input function is shown in Fig. 1 (21). The post-treaty (atmospheric nuclear test ban) "decay curve" shows that biomass carbon was 1.35 times Modern in 1977. Thus, for SRM 1649a, the fraction of biomass carbon, denoted "contemporary carbon" ([f.sub.C]) (22), equals [f.sub.M]/1.35. The fraction of fossil carbon is then 1 - [f.sub.C]. For source apportionment studies, caution must be exercised in the interpretation of [f.sub.C] in cases where the biomass material is not fully contemporary. This occurs when there are biological compartments having different time constants, and especially in biomass burning studies where the wood burned may span several years of growth. In that case, the atmospheric [C.sup.14] input function must be appropriately integrated (23).

3. Measurement Techniques Applied

Three classes of measurements are represented among the intercomparison results: Total Carbon (TC); Elemental Carbon (expressed as the ratio, EC/TC); and [C.sup.14] speciation. TC and [C.sup.14] data were taken from measurements performed directly on the bulk SRM (powder) only, to avoid possible uncertainties in loading and uniformity of the prototype filter RM. EC/TC ratios, on the other band, were drawn from both intercomparison materials (bulk SRM 1649a and prototype ACG filter deposits of the resuspended reference material.) In a few selected cases that will be discussed in Sec. 4 of this document, data for TC and EC/TC were obtained (by the same method) on both the bulk SRM and prototype filters, permitting comparability tests for the two materials.

TC ideally would refer to total non-carbonate carbon, thus comprising both organic carbon (OC) and elemental carbon (EC), and sometimes known as total organic carbon (TOC). We do not favor the use of TOC for this purpose, however, because of ambiguity with TC as the sum of organic and elemental carbon components. Regarding carbonate, however, earlier measurements on large (0.7 g to 1.0 g) samples of the bulk SRM showed that carbonate carbon was but 0.66 % of TC. This was fortunate, in that not all participating teams applied decarbonation pretreatment pretreatment,
n the protocols required before beginning therapy, usually of a diagnostic nature; before treatment.

pretreatment estimate,
n See predetermination.
.

TC results on the bulk SRM, submitted by seven teams, were of sufficient quality to generate a certified value for TC. In all cases combustion in oxygen (or dilute mixtures of [O.sub.2] in He) was employed to generate the [CO.sub.2] for quantification. Differences among the TC methods are treated below in Sec. 3.2.

[C.sup.14] data were obtained by low-level decay counting (11c) or accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS). Speciation was accomplished by applying appropriate chemical isolation procedures to the bulk SRM prior to 11c or AMS. These are presented in Sec. 3.4.

EC/TC ratios, for the bulk SRM and/or the prototype filter RM, resulted from the application of three primary approaches for the determination of elemental carbon: optical, thermal, and chemical. Optical transmission, using an appropriate attenuation coefficient The attenuation coefficient, is a basic quantity used in calculations of the penetration of materials by quantum particles. Linear Attenuation Coefficient
The Linear attenuation coefficient, also called the narrow beam attenuation coefficient
, yields a direct measure of EC, given certain assumptions. Thermal, or "dry oxidation" techniques serve to discriminate OC from EC on the basis of the relative resistance of the latter to volatilization volatilization /vol·a·til·iza·tion/ (vol?ah-til-i-za´shun) conversion into vapor or gas without chemical change.

vol·a·til·i·za·tion
n.
See evaporation.
 and reaction with oxygen. Chemical or "wet oxidation Wet oxidation is a form of hydrothermal treatment. It is the oxidation of dissolved or suspended components in water using oxygen as the oxidizer. It is referred to as "Wet Air Oxidation" (WAO) when air is used. " techniques rely on the resistance of EC to strong chemical oxidizing agents in solution, such as oxidizing acids and hydrogen peroxide hydrogen peroxide, chemical compound, H2O2, a colorless, syrupy liquid that is a strong oxidizing agent and, in water solution, a weak acid. It is miscible with cold water and is soluble in alcohol and ether. .

Hybrid techniques abound, in particular thermal-optical and thermal-chemical techniques. The former class utilizes EC transmission or reflectance to monitor the progress of thermal oxidation In microfabrication, thermal oxidation is a way to produce a thin layer of oxide (usually silicon dioxide) on the surface of a wafer (semiconductor). The technique forces an oxidizing agent to diffuse into the wafer at high temperature and react with it. , and in many cases to correct for pyrolytic py·rol·y·sis  
n.
Decomposition or transformation of a compound caused by heat.



pyro·lyt
 formation of artifact EC ("charring Charring is a process of incomplete combustion that often occurs when biological tissue (living or dead) is subjected to heat. The resulting matter is sometimes called char. Coke and charcoal are produced this way. "). Thermal-chemical techniques approach the problem by prevention, where chemical pretreatments are designed to remove species subject to high temperature pyrolysis py·rol·y·sis
n.
Decomposition or transformation of a chemical compound caused by heat.


pyrolysis (pīrol´isis),
n
. Two methods [TOK, Ch(Cr)K--terms to be defined below] explicitly incorporate kinetic analysis, where the asymptote asymptote

In mathematics, a line or curve that acts as the limit of another line or curve. For example, a descending curve that approaches but does not reach the horizontal axis is said to be asymptotic to that axis, which is the asymptote of the curve.
 (intercept) is estimated when fitting a sum of exponentials.

Brief descriptions and citations follow, for the principal techniques utilized for TC, EC/TC, and [C.sup.14], respectively.

3.1 Small Samples and Isotopic Assay: Some Special Considerations

The need for accurate EC metrology spans a number of disciplines, from atmospheric aerosol science Aerosol Science
Aerosols are characterized by a particle size distribution function (PSD). Most natural aerosols have a lognormal distribution.

Aerosol formation and growth consists of 3 processes:
  1. Nucleation
  2. Coagulation/Agglomeration
  3. Surface Growth
 to marine geochemistry to isotopic biogeochemistry bi·o·ge·o·chem·is·try  
n.
The study of the relationship between the geochemistry of a region and the animal and plant life in that region.



bi
. All of these disciplines have needs for EC reference materials and EC reference methods (9); and many have developed methods specially suited for their characteristic samples. Since the present SRM intercomparison was designed to address some of these multidisciplinary needs, participants and methodology were drawn from their respective communities.

New challenges resulting from this broadened scope were: (1) the application of chemical oxidation techniques that were developed both for large samples (e.g., gram quantities of marine sediment marine sediment

Any deposit of insoluble material, primarily rock and soil particles, transported from land areas to the ocean by wind, ice, and rivers, as well as the remains of marine organisms, products of submarine volcanic activity, and chemical precipitates from
) and for small samples (e.g., mg quantities of atmospheric aerosol); and (2) samples that could be readily treated in bulk vs those requiring special "micro" techniques. The latter include in situ In place. When something is "in situ," it is in its original location.  thermal optical reaction monitoring on small quartz filters, and isotopic speciation involving quantitative isolation of 10 [micro]g to 100 [micro]g of selected species for [C.sup.13] (IRMS IRMS Isotope Ratio Mass Spectrometry
IRMS Information Resources Management Service
IRMS Integrated Resource Management System
IRMS Institute for Reproductive Medicine and Science (St.
) or [C.sup.14] (AMS) assay. As a result, some of the following methods for EC and for [C.sup.14] speciation demanded some rather significant adaptations of "macro-"techniques to allow us to perform "chemistry on a filter" and to minimize both losses and blanks. Especially difficult are the problems of constraining EC particle-loss to less than 1 [micro]g while performing chemical oxidation or solvent extraction Solvent extraction

A technique, also called liquid extraction, for separating the components of a liquid solution. This technique depends upon the selective dissolving of one or more constituents of the solution into a suitable immiscible liquid solvent.
 on mg amounts of the SRM, o r processing small samples for [C.sup.14] speciation where contamination of both fossil and contemporary carbon must each be kept below the microgram level. The special approach to small samples is illustrated by one of the more complex, wet and dry oxidation, multi-reagent procedures--"Ch(N1)T"--which has been treated in extra detail below in Sec. 3.3.3.

3.2 Total Carbon Methods

A. Thermal optical transmission/combustion (24): In an oxygen-free helium atmosphere, the sample [approximately equal to] 1 mg) was heated in four increasing steps to about 820 [degrees]C to remove organic carbon. Organic compounds that are pyrolytically converted to elemental carbon were continuously monitored by measuring the transmission of diode laser See laser diode.  light through the filter. As organic compounds are volatilized vol·a·til·ize  
intr. & tr.v. vol·a·til·ized, vol·a·til·iz·ing, vol·a·til·iz·es
1. To become or make volatile.

2. To evaporate or cause to evaporate.
, they are immediately oxidized oxidized

having been modified by the process of oxidation.


oxidized cellulose
see absorbable cellulose.
 to [CO.sub.2] using a plug of [MnO.sub.2] at 860 [degrees]C; the [CO.sub.2] is reduced to methane over Ni on firebrick firebrick, brick that can withstand high temperatures, used to line flues, stacks, furnaces, and fireplaces. In general, such bricks have high melting points that range from about 2,800°F; (1.540°C;) for fireclay to 4,000°F; (2,200°C;) for silicon carbide.  in the presence of [H.sub.2], and measured using a flame ionization detector A flame ionization detector (FID) is a type of detector used in gas chromatography. Principle
The Flame Ionization Detector (FID) is one of the many methods by which to analyze materials coming off of gas chromatography column.
 (FID). After cooling the sample to 525 [degrees]C, a 2 % (or 5 %) [O.sub.2]/He mixture was introduced and the temperature increased in two steps to about 860 [degrees]C. Total carbon is derived from the total integrated signal, and calibration with substances of known stoichiometry stoichiometry

Determination of the proportions (by weight or number of molecules) in which elements or compounds react with one another. The rules for determining stoichiometric relationships are based on the laws of conservation (see
. [Teams 5, 8] (Method Code for Table 1: Combust com·bust  
v. com·bust·ed, com·bust·ing, com·busts

v.intr.
1.
a. To catch fire; burst into flame: The fire started when a pile of oily rags spontaneously combusted.
(TOT).)

B. Combustion-GC-TCD (25): Samples were weighed into Al boats, combusted to [CO.sub.2] at 900 [degrees]C in an atmosphere of [O.sub.2], purified by gas chromatography gas chromatography (GC)

Type of chromatography with a gas mixture as the mobile phase. In a packed column, the packing or solid support (held in a tube) serves as the stationary phase (vapour-phase chromatography, or VPC) or is coated with a liquid stationary phase
 (GC), quantified with GC using a thermal conductivity detector The thermal conductivity detector (TCD) is a bulk property detector commonly used in gas-liquid chromatography. [1]This detector senses changes in the thermal conductivity of the column effluent and compares it to a reference flow of carrier gas.  (TCD TCD Trinity College Dublin
TCD Chad (ISO Country code)
TCD Transcranial Doppler
TCD Thermal Conductivity Detector
TCD Traffic Control Device
TCD Tropical Conservation and Development
). [Team 18] (Method Code for Table 1: Combust(GCTCD).)

C. Combustion-NDIR (NIST) (4): The weighed sample was placed in a ceramic crucible crucible, vessel in which a substance is heated to a high temperature, as for fusing or calcining. The necessary properties of a crucible are that it maintain its mechanical strength and rigidity at high temperatures and that it not react in an undesirable way with  which was then purged with [O.sub.2] while inductively in·duc·tive  
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or using logical induction: inductive reasoning.

2. Electricity Of or arising from inductance: inductive reactance.
 heating the crucible. The CO and [CO.sub.2] produced were measured using a nondispersive infrared (NDIR NDIR Non Dispersive Infra Red (used to measure the concentration of CO, CO2 in exhaust) ) detector. [Team 9] (Method Code for Table 1: Combust(NDIR).)

D. Flash combustion (elemental analyzer) (26): Samples were placed in Ag capsules, subjected to repeated in situ mild microacidification (1 M HCI (Human Computer Interaction) Refers to the design and implementation of computer systems that people interact with. It includes desktop systems as well as embedded systems in all kinds of devices. ) to remove carbonates, and then fully oxidized and quantified by flash combustion/gas chromatographic chro·mat·o·graph  
n.
An instrument that produces a chromatogram.

tr.v. chro·mat·o·graphed, chro·mat·o·graph·ing, chro·mat·o·graphs
To separate and analyze by chromatography.
 analysis using a commercial carbon-hydrogen-nitrogen (CHN CHN China
CHN Chain
CHN Canadian Health Network
CHN Coalition on Human Needs
CHN California Homeschool Network
CHN Cleveland Housing Network
CHN Center for Human Nutrition
CHN Carbon, Hydrogen, Nitrogen
CHN Community Health Nurse
) analyzer. This process served also as the final carbon quantification step for the T375 method described below for the determination of elemental carbon. [Teams 3, 6] (Method Code for Table 1: Combust(CHN).)

E. Two-step thermal combustion) (15). Samples are first decarbonated with HCI vapor (excess removed with NaOH pellets), and then flash heated in a stream of oxygen at 340 [degrees[C for 2 h to remove OC. Final combustion of the remaining EC component takes place at 1100 [degrees]C. [CO.sub.2] from both steps is quantified by coulometric titration titration (tītrā`shən), gradual addition of an acidic solution to a basic solution or vice versa (see acids and bases); titrations are used to determine the concentration of acids or bases in solution. . [Team 10] (Method Code for Table 1: Combust(2step).)

3.3 Elemental Carbon Methods

Note that abbreviated names, suggestive of suggestive of Decision making adjective Referring to a pattern by LM or imaging, that the interpreter associates with a particular–usually malignant lesion. See Aunt Millie approach, Defensive medicine.  the respective methods, are given at the beginning of each method description. These will be used in the following section and in Table 2 to efficiently link results with specific methods.

3.3.1 Optical Attenuation Loss of signal power in a transmission.
Attenuation

The reduction in level of a transmitted quantity as a function of a parameter, usually distance. It is applied mainly to acoustic or electromagnetic waves and is expressed as the ratio of power densities.


AETH (Optical transmission, "aethalometry") [27]: Bulk SRM ([approximately equal to] 1 mg) was loaded on a 25 mm diameter quartz fiber filter, and the attenuation of a visible light beam was compared to that of a blank filter. EC loading was calculated from the observed attenuation using an EC attenuation coefficient of 19 [m.sup.2]/g, as recommended by the manufacturer of the Aethalometer for aerosol deposited on quartz fiber filters. (It should be noted that a range of values for the attenuation coefficient has been reported in the literature: from about 5 [m.sub.2]/g in remote regions to about 20 [m.sup.2]/g in urban locations [28, 29].) [Team 1]

3.3.2 Selective Thermal ("Dry") Oxidation and Thermal-Optical Hybrids

T375 (Thermal oxidation) [26, 30]: Samples were weighed into Ag capsules, carbonates removed by repeated mild in situ acidification acidification

a technology used by processors to preserve foods by adding acids (such as acetic, citric, phosphoric, propionic and lactic acid) and thereby reduce the risk of growth of harmful bacteria.
 (1 M HCI), followed by volatilization and thermal oxidation at 375 [degrees]C for 24 h in air with continuous supply to ensure excess oxygen. The isolated EC residue was quantified by flash combustion/gas chromatographic analysis using commercial CHN analyzers. The more recent publication [30] reports on an extensive optimization and interference study, and introduces the acronym CTO (Chief Technical Officer) The executive responsible for the technical direction of an organization. See CIO and salary survey.  for this "chemo-thermal oxidation method." [Teams 2-4, 6]. Adaptations: Team 3 used a tube furnace In solid state chemistry, a tube furnace is a heating device for conducting syntheses and purifications of inorganic compounds. The usual design consists of a cylindrical cavity surrounded by heating coils, which are imbedded in a thermally insulating matrix.  with continuous air flow, whereas Teams 2, 4, and 6 used muffle furnaces; Team 4 calculated EC from the [CO.sub.2] yield from closed tube combustion for [C.sup.14] (EC) analysis; Team 6 used a 12 h oxidation step at 375 [degrees]C.

T340 (Two-step thermal oxidation) (15). Samples are first decarbonated with HCI vapor (excess removed with NaOH pellets), and then flash heated in a stream of oxygen at 340 [degrees]C for 2 h to remove OC. Final combustion of the remaining EC component takes place at 1100 [degrees]C, and the resulting [CO.sub.2] is quantified by coulometric titration. [Team 10; adaptation of the method by Team 7 omitted the decarbonation step, and used an elemental (CHN) analyzer for the final EC quantification.]

T500 (Evolved gas analysis Evolved gas analysis (EGA) is a method used to study the gas evolved from a heated sample that undergoes decomposition or desorption. It is possible to detect which gas is evolved using evolved gas detection (EGD). , EGA (Enhanced Graphics Adapter) An early IBM video display standard that provided medium-resolution text and graphics. It required a digital RGB Enhanced Color Display or equivalent monitor and was superseded by VGA.

EGA - Enhanced Graphics Adapter
) (14). A thermal oxidation method in which the sample combustion takes place in a stream of oxygen over the temperature range: 50 [degrees]C to 800 [degrees]C, with EC defined by highest temperature peak, which is generally centered at [approximately equal to] 500 [degrees]C. To minimize the effect of OC on the low temperature side of the peak, the full peak area is taken as twice that of the high temperature side. OC artifacts are minimized by pretreatment (solvent extraction: acetone acetone (ăs`ĭtōn), dimethyl ketone (dīmĕth`əl kē`tōn), or 2-propanone (prō`pənōn), CH3COCH3 , hexane hexane /hex·ane/ (hek´san) a saturated hydrogen obtained by distillation from petroleum.

hex·ane
n.
, methanol); and mechanical EC loss during extraction is monitored optically by laser transmission. Reliable transmission monitoring requires that sample loading not exceed 10 [micro]g EC per [cm.sup.2]. [Team 14]

TOT (Thermal optical transmission) (24): In an oxygen-free helium atmosphere, the sample (= 1 mg) on a 1 [cm.sup.2] to 1.5 [cm.sup.2] quartz fiber filter punch undergoes stepwise stepwise

incremental; additional information is added at each step.


stepwise multiple regression
used when a large number of possible explanatory variables are available and there is difficulty interpreting the partial regression
 heating from about 60 [degrees]C to 900 [degrees]C to volatilize vol·a·til·ize  
intr. & tr.v. vol·a·til·ized, vol·a·til·iz·ing, vol·a·til·iz·es
1. To become or make volatile.

2. To evaporate or cause to evaporate.
 and/or decompose de·com·pose  
v. de·com·posed, de·com·pos·ing, de·com·pos·es

v.tr.
1. To separate into components or basic elements.

2. To cause to rot.

v.intr.
1.
 organic carbon. Char char: see salmon.
char

Any of several freshwater food and game fishes (genus Salvelinus) of the salmon family, distinguished from the similar trout by light, rather than black, spots; by a boat-shaped, rather than flat, vomer (bone) on the roof of
 formation from the pyrolysis of organic matter is monitored continuously by measuring the transmission of a 670 nm diode laser beam through the filter. As organic compounds are volatilized, they are immediately oxidized to [CO.sub.2] using a plug of [MnO.sub.2] at 860 [degrees]C, reduced to methane over Ni on firebrick in the presence of [H.sub.2], and measured using a flame ionization detector (FID). After cooling the sample to 525 [degrees]C, a 5 % [O.sub.2]/He mixture is introduced and the temperature increased stepwise to about 900 [degrees]C. Based on the FID response and laser-transmission data, the amounts of organic, elemental, and pyrolytic carbon Pyrolytic carbon is a material similar to graphite, but with some covalent bonding between its graphene sheets.

Generally it is produced by heating a hydrocarbon nearly to its decomposition temperature, and permitting the graphite to crystallise (pyrolysis).
 are then calculated for the sample. [Teams 5, 8, l8] (4)

TOR (Thermal optical reflectance) (6). A 0.5 [cm.sup.2] punch of the sample (quartz) filter was subjected to a stepped temperature program in a flow of helium (120 [degrees]C, 250 [degrees]C, 450 [degrees]C, and 550 [degrees]C), using [MnO.sub.2] at about 910 [degrees]C to convert volatilized OC to [CO.sub.2]. This was followed by oxidation of residual carbon (EC) in a flow of [O.sub.2] (2 % in He) with temperature steps at 550 [degrees]C, 700 [degrees]C, and 800 [degrees]C. The switch (He to [O.sub.2]) took place at the "split time for pyrolysis correction," determined by monitoring reflectance with a diode laser. [CO.sub.2] was determined with an FID detector after being reduced to [CH.sub.4] with [H.sub.2] (Ni catalyst). [Team 11]

TLT TLT Tilt
TLT The Literary Times
TLT Teaching, Learning & Technology
TLT The Last Temptation (music album)
TLT Transmission Line Transformer
TLT The Little Theatre
TLT Test Loop Translator
TLT Trails Less Traveled
 (TOT, with linear temperature program) (31, 32). The bulk SRM spread on a quartz fiber filter as well as samples of the prototype filter RM (ACG), were processed in a stream of [O.sub.2] from laboratory temperature to 800 [degrees]C with a linear temperature ramp of 20 [degrees]C per min, with [CO.sub.2] quantification by NDIR. Transmission measurement with a laser diode A semiconductor-based laser used to generate analog signals or digital pulses for transmission through optical fibers. Both laser diodes and LEDs (light-emitting diodes) are used for this purpose, but the laser diode generates a smaller beam that is easier to couple with the smaller core  was used to determine the split time for pyrolysis correction. [Team 12]

TOK (Thermal kinetic oxidation/intercept-EC) (33, 34) EC is defined as the refractory (intercept) component that survives isothermal i·so·ther·mal
adj.
Of, relating to, or indicating equal or constant temperatures.



isothermal, isothermic

having the same temperature.
 oxidation at 560 [degrees]C in a stream of He(5 % [O.sub.2]). The intercept-EC is estimated by fitting a five-parameter model (two exponentials + intercept) to the residual carbon rate function. Loss of more labile labile /la·bile/ (la´bil)
1. gliding; moving from point to point over the surface; unstable; fluctuating.

2. chemically unstable.


la·bile
adj.
1.
 EC is monitored during oxidation by transmission of a diode laser beam. [Team 5]

3.3.3 Selective Chemical ("Wet") Oxidation and Thermal-Chemical Hybrids

Ch(N1)T ([HNO HNO Hals Nasen Ohrenheilkunde
HNO Hals-Nasen-Ohren Heilkunde (German: throat, nose and ear medicine)
HNO Host Network Operator
HNO Harvard News Office
HNO Helvetica Narrow Oblique (font) 
.sub.3]-thermal oxidation)--an archetype archetype (är`kĭtīp') [Gr. arch=first, typos=mold], term whose earlier meaning, "original model," or "prototype," has been enlarged by C. G. Jung and by several contemporary literary critics.  for "micro" chemical and isotopic speciation. The Ch(N1)T procedure was adapted from a hybrid wet-dry oxidation procedure developed for the analysis of "soot carbon" in bulk soil samples (35). The miniaturized version was developed at NIST for this intercomparison and for subsequent application in atmospheric and cryospheric isotopic chemistry. It represents perhaps the first time that wet chemical oxidation has been applied to the isolation of sub-mg amounts of EC, with subsequent [C.sup.14] speciation by small sample AMS (36). Its key attributes are "wet chemistry on a filter" and "2-stage thermal oxidation in a combustion tube." As indicated in Sec. 3.1 the description given here has been expanded to illustrate the special considerations needed to adapt a "macro" procedure for EC to "micro" assay of EC and [C.sup.14]-EC in small atmospheric samples.

The basic process, which includes acid-base pretreatment followed by 2-step thermal oxidation, was adapted to operate on the bulk SRM, distributed on a 25 mm quartz filter using a vortex mixing-filtration procedure. For mg sized samples, minimization of reagent amounts and the performance of reactions on quartz filters rather than in test tubes, are important for the reduction of both particle loss and blanks. NaOH assists in the hydrolysis hydrolysis (hīdrŏl`ĭsĭs), chemical reaction of a compound with water, usually resulting in the formation of one or more new compounds.  of natural biopolymers, which tend otherwise to char in thermal processing; and concentrated (laboratory temperature) [HNO.sub.3] serves as the "wet chemical" oxidizing agent. Laboratory temperature [HNO.sub.3] is used to minimize attack on EC (10). The second stage, a two-step thermal process adapted from Cachier, et al. (15), is again miniaturized to suit small, closed tube (CT) combustion procedures, essential for quantitative recovery of both the OC- and the EC-derived [CO.sub.2] for the preparation of small AMS targets for [C.sup.14] assay (37).

The first step is to achieve the efficient transfer of milligram milligram /mil·li·gram/ (mg) (mil´i-gram) one thousandth (10-3) of a gram.

mil·li·gram
n. Abbr. mg
A metric unit of mass equal to one thousandth (10-3) of a gram.
 and submilligram amounts of particulate carbon--from the SRM, or from ice core meltwater--to a small quartz filter. For the present intercomparison, the goal was to transfer 1 mg to 1.5 mg of the bulk SRM 1649a to 25 mm quartz filters, which had been prefired for 3 h at 900 [degrees]C, to minimize the filter blank. Transfer was accomplished by dispersing the material in 50 mL of prefiltered distilled water Noun 1. distilled water - water that has been purified by distillation
H2O, water - binary compound that occurs at room temperature as a clear colorless odorless tasteless liquid; freezes into ice below 0 degrees centigrade and boils above 100 degrees centigrade;
 and vortex mixing for 2 min, followed by vacuum filtration, with repeated passage of the filtrate filtrate /fil·trate/ (fil´trat) a liquid or gas that has passed through a filter.

fil·trate
v.
To put or go through a filter.

n.
 through the filter. This was followed by drying in a desiccator des·ic·cate  
v. des·ic·cat·ed, des·ic·cat·ing, des·ic·cates

v.tr.
1. To dry out thoroughly.

2. To preserve (foods) by removing the moisture. See Synonyms at dry.

3.
 for 24 h to 36 h.

The first chemical pretreatment stage is designed to eliminate inorganic carbon, and polymeric polymeric /poly·mer·ic/ (pol?i-mer´ik) exhibiting the characteristics of a polymer.

pol·y·mer·ic
adj.
1. Having the properties of a polymer.

2.
 organics that are apt to form artifact EC (char) in thermal processes. In the "micro" adaptation, gravity feed was used, with 5 mL each of the following reagents added in sequence: 1 M NaOH (twice), 70% (mass fraction) [HNO.sub.3] (once), 1 M NaOH (thrice thrice  
adv.
1. Three times.

2. In a threefold quantity or degree.

3. Archaic Extremely; greatly.
), 1% (mass fraction) HCl (once), and prefiltered distilled [H.sub.2]O (twice). Following a final rinse with 100 mL of distilled water with vacuum filtration, the sample was oven dried at 105[degrees]C for 2 h.

The second, thermal oxidation stage utilized two-step closed tube combustion, where 380 mbar (38.5 kPa) of high purity [O.sub.2] was added to an evacuated quartz tube containing the sample together with CuO and Ag wire. The first thermal step eliminated residual OC by heating the sealed quartz tube at 340 [degrees]C for 2 hours, followed by evacuation of the evolved gases (5); in the second step the residual EC was oxidized by closed tube combustion at 950 [degrees]C. After cryogenic purification, the [CO.sub.2] was quantified by calibrated cal·i·brate  
tr.v. cal·i·brat·ed, cal·i·brat·ing, cal·i·brates
1. To check, adjust, or determine by comparison with a standard (the graduations of a quantitative measuring instrument):
 volume manometry manometry /ma·nom·e·try/ (-e-tre) the measurement of pressure by means of a manometer.

anal manometry
 (39). [Team 7] For the smallest samples (<25 [micro]g C), accelerator targets were prepared using the NIST-Woods Hole "dilution-AMS" procedure (36). A unique problem that came with vigorous, multistage mul·ti·stage  
adj.
1. Functioning in more than one stage: a multistage design project.

2. Relating to or composed of two or more propulsion units.
 chemical and thermal processing was the introduction of trace impurities that: (1) interfered with the cryogenic purification of [CO.sub.2], leading to erroneous volumetric volumetric /vol·u·met·ric/ (vol?u-met´rik) pertaining to or accompanied by measurement in volumes.

vol·u·met·ric
adj.
Of or relating to measurement by volume.
 dilution factors, and (2) sometimes led to poor performing accelerator targets becau se of interference in the catalytic reduction of [CO.sub.2] in the final step of "graphitic" AMS target fabrication fabrication (fab´rikā´shn),
n the construction or making of a restoration.
 (36).

Ch(N2)T ([HNO.sub.3]-thermal oxidation) (39, 40). The Ch(N2)T two-stage, chemical-thermal oxidation procedure for mg sized samples is similar to Ch(N1)T, except that pretreatment steps with NaOH were omitted in an effort to minimize the chemical blank and losses for small samples. "Wet-chemical" oxidation took place with laboratory temperature 70% (mass fraction) [HNO.sub.3]; and thermal, two-step closed tube oxidation took place at 340 [degrees]C (2 h) and 950 [degrees]C, with [O.sub.2] and CuO as the respective oxidizing agents. [Teams 1, 7]

Ch(N3) (Chemical oxidation, hot [HNO.sub.3]) (25, 41). This method was applied to large samples such as aerosol deposits on 10 [cm.sup.2] to 20 [cm.sup.2] portions of "hivol" quartz filters. For SRM 1649, about 1g of the bulk material was placed in a 100 mL beaker beaker /beak·er/ (bek´er) a glass cup, usually with a lip for pouring, used by chemists and pharmacists.

beaker

a round laboratory vessel of various materials, usually with parallel sides and often with a pouring spout.
 and treated with 25 mL boiling 70% (mass fraction) [HNO.sub.3] for 20 min. Next, 35 mL of 6 M [HNO.sub.3] was added and the mixture was allowed to stand overnight. This was followed by centrifugation Centrifugation

A mechanical method of separating immiscible liquids or solids from liquids by the application of centrifugal force. This force can be very great, and separations which proceed slowly by gravity can be speeded up enormously in centrifugal
, and rinsing of the residue four times with distilled water. The final residual carbon (EC) was quantified by the inductive inductive

1. eliciting a reaction within an organism.

2.


inductive heating
a form of radiofrequency hyperthermia that selectively heats muscle, blood and proteinaceous tissue, sparing fat and air-containing tissues.
 furnace combustion-NDIR technique. [Team 9]

Ch(Cr)K (Chemical oxidation, dichromate/residue, "Wolbach") (42, 43). Wet oxidization with 0.25 M [Cr.sub.2][O.sub.7] = in 2 M [H.sub.2][SO.sub.4] at 23 [degrees]C was performed on the bulk SRM for periods up to 406 h. The 406 h residual carbon was taken as EC. Kinetic analysis showed that the oxidation process could be represented as a sum of two exponential components (half lives: 0.85 h [plus or minus]0.31 h, and 1003 h [plus or minus]430 h). [Team 13]

Ch(N4) ([HNO.sub.3], "Verardo") (44). A 5 mg portion of the bulk SRM was placed in an Al boat, and treated with 300 [micro]L of hot, concentrated [HNO.sub.3], in 30 [micro]L increments. After oven drying overnight at 60[degrees]C, the residual carbon was quantified with an elemental (CHN) analyzer. It was observed that, due to the lack of rinsing, the results could be high if there is a partially oxidized carbonaceous residue. [Team 13]

3.4 [C.sup.14] Speciation

3.4.1 Total Carbon

Combustion-Manometry (45). Samples were combusted to [CO.sup.2] in a quartz furnace filled with 101 kPa [O.sub.2]. Downstream from the combustion furnace is a series of three furnaces The Three Furnaces of China () refers to the especially hot summer weather in several major cities in the People's Republic of China:
  • Wuhan
  • Nanjing
  • Chongqing
Sometimes, Nanchang is added, making The Four Furnaces of China ().
: (1) Pt gauze gauze (gawz) a light, open-meshed fabric of muslin or similar material.

absorbable gauze  gauze made from oxidized cellulose.
 at 900 [degrees]C, (2) CuO at 800 [degrees]C, and (3) Ag wool at 400 [degrees]C to assure complete combustion and to purify Purify - A debugging tool from Pure Software.  the [CO.sub.2] of sulfur and halogen halogen (hăl`əjĕn) [Gr.,=salt-bearing], any of the chemically active elements found in Group 17 of the periodic table; the name applies especially to fluorine (symbol F), chlorine (Cl), bromine (Br), and iodine (I).  containing impurities. The sample gas stream is then reduced to less than 13 kPa to prevent the condensation of liquid [O.sub.2] by controlling the gas flow through the system using a throttle valve and a vacuum pump Vacuum pump

A device that reduces the pressure of a gas (usually air) in a container. When gas in a closed container is lowered from atmospheric pressure, the operation constitutes an increase in vacuum in this container.
. Before the vacuum pump, the sample [CO.sub.2] is cryogenically trapped at liquid [N.sub.2] temperature (-196 [degrees]C) in a series of spiral glass traps. The resulting [CO.sub.2] is cryogenically separated from other gaseous gas·e·ous
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or existing as a gas.

2. Full of or containing gas; gassy.
 combustion products by distillation distillation, process used to separate the substances composing a mixture. It involves a change of state, as of liquid to gas, and subsequent condensation. The process was probably first used in the production of intoxicating beverages.  from -78 [degrees]C and quantified using manometry in a calibrated volume. Low-level [C.sup.14] decay counting was performed on the [CO.sub.2] using a miniature gas proportional count er at NIST (46). [Team 16]

[H.sub.3][PO.sub.4]-Combustion-Manometry (47). A subsample sub·sam·ple  
n.
A sample drawn from a larger sample.

tr.v. sub·sam·pled, sub·sam·pling, sub·sam·ples
To take a subsample from (a larger sample).
 of SRM 1649a, Ag foil (prefired at 550 [degrees]C), and CuO wire (prefired at 850 [degrees]C) were added to a quartz tube. Approximately 5 mL of 3% [H.sub.3][PO.sub.4] (mass fraction) was added to the tube to remove any inorganic carbon. The quartz tube was then attached to a vacuum line, evacuated to a pressure of less than 5 Pa, sealed, and combusted to [CO.sub.2] at 850 [degrees]C for 4 h. The [CO.sub.2] was reduced to graphite over Co catalyst at 850 [degrees]C in the presence of [H.sub.2]. Accelerator mass spectrometry [C.sup.14] measurements were performed at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory: see Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.

(body) Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory - (LLNL) A research organaisatin operated by the University of California under a contract with the US Department of Energy.
. [Team 13]

Combusion-GC-CHN (48). Samples were placed in Sn boats and fully oxidized and quantified by flash combustion/gas chromatographic analysis using a commercial CHN-analyzer, by essentially the same procedure used for TC quantification by Combustion-GC-TCD. The purified [CO.sub.2] was then trapped at -196 [degrees]C and transferred to the Univ. Arizona for preparation of graphite targets and [C.sup.14] AMS (49). [Team 17]

3.4.2 Elemental Carbon

Thermal oxidation/residue (50). [C.sup.14] is measured in the residual carbon after thermal oxidation at 375 [degrees]C for 24 h (to remove labile organic carbon) and acidification (to remove inorganic carbonates). The residual carbon is placed in a quartz tube containing copper oxide Noun 1. copper oxide - an oxide of copper
oxide - any compound of oxygen with another element or a radical
 and elemental silver, and combusted at 850 [degrees]C for 5 h. The [C.sup.14] content of the resulting [CO.sub.2] was measured by accelerator mass spectrometry at Woods Hole Woods Hole, uninc. village (1990 pop. 1,080) and seaport in the town of Falmouth, Barnstable co., SE Mass., at the southwestern extremity of Cape Cod. It is the departure point for nearby island resorts (Martha's Vineyard, Nantucket). . [Team 4]

Chemical oxidation/residue (42). Wet oxidization with 0.25 M [Cr.sub.2][O.sub.7]= in 2 M [H.sub.2][SO.sub.4] at 23 [degrees]C was performed for periods up to 406 h. The [C.sup.14] AMS result is given for the residual carbon for the longest (406 h) reaction period. Because of the gentler oxidation treatment (chemical vs thermal), the [C.sup.14] must reflect somewhat less refractory manifestations of elemental carbon. [Team 13]

Thermal kinetic oxidation/intercept-[C.sup.14] (33, 34). EC is defined as the refractory (intercept) component that survives isothermal oxidation at 560 [degrees]C in a stream of He (5 % [O.sub.2][v]). This intercept-EC is estimated by fitting a five-parameter model (two exponentials + intercept) to the residual carbon rate function. Intercept- [C.sup.14] is estimated as the corresponding end point of a series of three intermediate samples taken for [C.sup.14] AMS. [Team 5]

3.4.3 Selected Organic Fractions

Aromatic Carbon

Soxhlet extraction/LC isolation of the aromatic fraction (51). Samples were Soxhlet extracted for 24 h with dichloromethane. The extract was concentrated to a small volume under a stream of [N.sub.2]. The concentrated extract was placed on a silica solid phase extraction Solid-phase extraction (SPE) is a separation process that is used to extract compounds (called analytes) from a mixture of impurities. Analytical laboratories use solid phase extraction to concentrate and purify samples for analysis.  (SPE SPE - Software Practice and Experience ) cartridge and eluted with 10 % (w) dichloromethane in pentane pen·tane  
n.
Any of three colorless, flammable isomeric hydrocarbons, C5H12, derived from petroleum and used as solvents.
. The aromatic fraction was isolated using normal phase liquid chromatography on an aminopropylsilane column. This fraction was concentrated and a 1 mL aliquot aliquot (al-ee-kwoh) adj. a definite fractional share, usually applied when dividing and distributing a dead person's estate or trust assets. (See: share)  transferred to a quartz tube and evaporated evaporated

reduced in volume by evaporation; concentrated to a denser form.
 to dryness. CuO was added to the tube which was then attached to a vacuum line, evacuated, sealed, and the contents combusted to [CO.sub.2]. Low-level [C.sup.14] decay counting was performed on the sample [CO.sub.2] using a miniature gas proportional counter Noun 1. proportional counter - counter tube whose output pulse is proportional to number of ions produced
proportional counter tube

boron counter tube - a proportional counter tube for counting neutrons
 at NIST (46). [Team 16]

Polar, Aliphatic, and Aromatic/PAH Carbon

Soxhlet Extraction/LC/PCGC/AMS (51, 52). Extraction followed by LC was used for isolating Polar, Aromatic, and Aliphatic fractions for [C.sup.14] analysis. The aromatic fraction was specially purified using silica gel silica gel, chemical compound. It is a colloidal form of silica, and usually resembles coarse white sand. It may be prepared by partial dehydration of metasilicic acid, H2SiO3. Because it has many tiny pores, it has great adsorptive power.  flash chromatography and LC PAH ring size fractionation fractionation /frac·tion·a·tion/ (frak?shun-a´shun)
1. in radiology, division of the total dose of radiation into small doses administered at intervals.

2.
, prior to separation and collection of individual PAH using an automated preparative pre·par·a·tive  
adj.
Serving or tending to prepare or make ready; preliminary.

n.
Something that prepares for or acts as a preliminary to something following.
 capillary GC (PCGC PCGC Pondok Cabe Golf Club (Indonesia)
PCGC Presidents Committee on Government Contracts
) system (50). The individual PAH fractions were then subjected to closed-tube combustion and [C.sup.14] determined by AMS (53, 54). [Teams 4, 15]

4. Results and Discussion

Intercomparison results are presented separately for the three measurand classes (TC, ECITC ECITC European Committee for Information technology Testing and Certification , and [C.sup.14] speciation) for the methods described above, and the coded teams. A reminder regarding the Team codes: The numerical Team codes do not necessarily convey different institutions; but rather they indicate which operator or group of collaborators were responsible for the individual results. In one case, for example, where the same (nominal) method was employed by two different operators in the same institution, it was desirable to distinguish the two sets of results by giving them different Team codes. (See Appendix 2.)

4.1 Total Carbon

Total carbon (TC) results were drawn strictly from intercomparison data derived from bulk SRM measurements. In the two cases where method A--Combust(-TOT)--was used, the bulk material was carefully spread and weighed on the quartz filter that was inserted into the combustion zone. Results, estimates and standard uncertainties (u), for the seven qualifying data are given in Table 1. (See Sec. 3.2 for descriptions of the five TC methods, together with the abbreviated method codes used in the table.) Since the results are all consistent within the stated uncertainties, the Certified Value for TC was taken as the weighted mean, 0.1768 [+ or -] 0.0008 (g/g) where the standard uncertainty is based on the absolute weights. (6)

Two considerations were important in deriving the TC certified value: carbonate carbon, and heterogeneity. As mentioned previously, carbonate removal was applied as a pretreatment in some cases, but not in all. Team 10 did it both ways; the result from that pretreatment is reported in Table 1. Fortunately, carbonate carbon is negligible. The information value given in the Certificate of Analysis for SRM 1649a is but 0.66 % of the TC value; the independent estimate (and standard uncertainty) based on the difference between the two results from team 10, is -(1.4 [+ or -] 2.1)% of the TC value.

Heterogeneity, as reflected by varying TC content with mass of the SRM taken for analysis was investigated by Klouda for small samples of the bulk SRM (25). No significant dependence on sample size was seen over the range of about (0.3 to 9) mg of the bulk SRM. An approximate bound for TC heterogeneity over this range is 1.7 % relative. Heterogeneity was tested separately for PAHs. On p. 3 of the new certificate of analysis, issued 31 January 2001, it is stated that "analyses of subsamples of 1 mg to 400 mg show no significant differences in the PAH concentrations, and a sample size of approximately 450 mg will contribute less than 1% error due to sample homogeneity (sic) for the PAHs for which certified values are provided." (2). Additional relevant information for the newly certified lot of SRM 1649a includes the unit size (2.5 g), and the expiration date Expiration Date

The day on which an options or futures contract is no longer valid and, therefore, ceases to exist.

Notes:
The expiration date for all listed stock options in the U.S.
 of the certification: 30 June 2007. (See the following section for heterogeneity data for EC/TC.)

4.2 Elemental Carbon (7)

In a special sense, elemental carbon (EC) lies at the heart of this intercomparison. It has central importance in linking particle emissions from natural and anthropogenic an·thro·po·gen·ic  
adj.
1. Of or relating to anthropogenesis.

2. Caused by humans: anthropogenic degradation of the environment.
 combustion with potentially deleterious deleterious adj. harmful.  effects of "Black Carbon" (BC) on visibility, health, and climate. Yet, BC is neither a unique substance, nor an entity for which consensus nomenclature or measurement data obtain. A key objective of this intercomparison has been to examine patterns of results from the perspective of the diverse chemical and physical characteristics of a broad array of BC measurement techniques. No method or result can in principle be judged "correct" (or incorrect), but it is hoped that insight may be gained on the utility of different techniques to probe different aspects of this complex material. (8) To minimize nomenclature confusion, this remarkable state of matter is referred to as elemental carbon (EC) in the SRM 1649a certificate of analysis as well as in this manuscript.

Experimental data for SRM 1649a EC, expressed as the dimensionless ratio EC/TC, are presented in Table 2, along with teams and methods from Sec. 3.3. Note that data based on optical or thermal optical measurements of the prototype (ACG) reference material are shown in italics, to distinguish them from data for the bulk Standard Reference Material. When determined with a small punch from the prototype filter RM, these processes give results in [micro]g EC/[cm.sup.2] and, except for aethalometry (AETH), [micro]g TC/[m.sup.2]. The ratio (EC/TC) for the particular punch follows directly without the need to know the mass loading (mg/[cm.sup.2]). To the extent that the ratio is independent of variations in mass loading, it should be more robust than either of the elemental or total carbon values.

4.2.1 Descriptive Overview of the Data

Complementing the "view" of the data given in tabular form Same as table view with respect to printed output. , it is useful to provide a descriptive graphical summary, relatively free from assumptions, such as normality or even unimodality. Inspired by the "black carbon spectrum" metaphor, with different analytical methods probing different parts of that spectrum, it has been interesting to apply a multi-modal method of graphical data summarization, based on the "quantitative gap" approach for representing complex intercomparison data in chemical metrology (56). The resulting visual summarization of the entire EC/TC dataset is given in Fig. 2.

Based on the modality modality /mo·dal·i·ty/ (mo-dal´i-te)
1. a method of application of, or the employment of, any therapeutic agent, especially a physical agent.

2.
 (number of major, n > 2, clusters) displayed, it is useful to further summarize the data with robust boxplots or the corresponding exploratory statistics for each such cluster. Taking the latter course, we give medians and inter-quartile ranges for clusters 1, 2, 3. Note that the full dataset spans a range of 0.069, 0.520 (factor of 7.5.)
    Cluster      Median     Quartiles
(n, membership)  (EC/TC)  (lower, upper)

   1 (n = 4)      0.075    0.071, 0.078
   2 (n = 4)      0.28     0.27, 0.29
   3 (n = 5)      0.46     0.44, 0.50


This exploratory summarization of the intercomparison results must not be over-interpreted. It is offered, as with classical cluster analysis Cluster analysis

A statistical technique that identifies clusters of stocks whose returns are highly correlated within each cluster and relatively uncorrelated across clusters. Cluster analysis has identified groupings such as growth, cyclical, stable, and energy stocks.
, to give a visual grasp of the data structure, and perhaps suggest regions of the data that merit further exploration in terms of their physical and chemical implications. (9) Consideration of such implications follows in Sec. 4.2.2.

4.2.2 Methodological Contrasts and Artifacts

Chemical vs thermal oxidation. One of the more striking contrasts between methods is the use of (wet) chemical vs (dry) thermal oxidation. We note that thermal method results (codes including 'T') cover the full range of EC/TC values, whereas results from pure chemical oxidation methods (codes excluding 'T') are restricted to the upper regions (EC/TC [greater than or equal to] 0.29). This is Consistent with the greater resistance of polymeric hydrocarbon structures to chemical as opposed to thermal oxidation, and it suggests that vigorous thermal oxidation may be required for isolation of the most resistant soot component of elemental carbon. For both, however, there are matters of kinetics kinetics: see dynamics.
Kinetics (classical mechanics)

That part of classical mechanics which deals with the relation between the motions of material bodies and the forces acting upon them.
, to be considered below.

Sample heterogeneity and particle loss. For EC/TC analysis there are two sample heterogeneity issues to consider: variations with sample size (mass of the bulk SRM taken for analysis), and variations in loading within and between samples loaded on filters-primarily for analysis by optical or thermal optical methods. While definitive information on these matters is not yet available, some very useful preliminary information is contained in some of the participants' results.

First, regarding bulk sample heterogeneity and recovery: Participant (Team) number 7, performed a series of measurements with method Ch(N2)T covering the range of 0.9 rug to 13.6 mg bulk SRM. The results indicate that reasonably reproducible values [[approximately equal to] (3 to 4) % rsd] obtain for 2 mg and above, whereas greater scatter and decreased EC was found with smaller sample sizes.

This brings up the critical matter of particle loss that may accompany chemical processing of very small samples (See also Sec. 3.1). It should be noted that in the limited study variations due to particle loss and EC heterogeneity are somewhat confounded. Two examples of particle loss arose in the intercomparison. The first is the decreased recovery of EC noted above, where apparent EC content dropped by about 15 % (relative) for 1 mg samples of bulk SRM. The second occurred when Team 14 attempted to apply organic solvents to ACG prototype filter samples using method T500_EGA. Again, because of particle loss (from the filter), this extraction step could not be performed reliably.

Ironically, the probable impact on the EC/TC results given in Table 2 is reversed for the two methods. That is, for method Ch(N2)T particle loss would lead to EC data that are biased low; whereas inability to apply OC solvent extraction to ACG filters without particle loss with method T500_EGA could lead to positive bias because of OC masquerading 1. (networking) masquerading - "NAT" (Linux kernel name).
2. (messaging) masquerading - Hiding the names of internal e-mail client and gateway machines from the outside world by rewriting the "From" address and other headers as the message leaves the
 as EC in the high temperature combustion peak. Note that the pre-extraction upper bound for EC/TC, 0.50, is given in Table 2, row 18. The lower bound, following extraction with possible particle loss is 0.40.

Filter loading and optical data. Optical and optical-hybrid methods applied to the SRM 1649a, or to the prototype filter RM, depend on valid and representative measurements of transmission (or reflectance). Four artifacts are of concern. First, for the purely optical method AETH, the surface density (EC/[cm.sup.2]) is derived from transmission (sample compared to blank filter) and an assumed attenuation coefficient. For aerosol distributed on quartz filters the manufacturer of the aethalometer recommends a value of 19 [m.sup.2]/g for EC (used for the AETH result in Table 2). Investigations of aerosol samples from diverse regions, however, indicate that there can be wide variations in this coefficient, roughly (5 to 20) [m.sup.2]/g (28). Taken at face value, this range would suggest that the AETH result in Table 2 might be considered a lower limit for EC/TC. Second, non-linearity in transmission sets in at about 10 [micro]g EC/[cm.sup.2], rendering measurements on heavily loaded filters unreliable. This was a problem with the attempt to monitor EC loss optically following solvent extraction of ACG filters by Team 14, where EC loading was found to be 30 [micro]g/[cm.sup.2] or more. Third, intra- and inter-filter loading heterogeneity add to the imprecision of absolute ([micro]g EC/[cm.sup.2]) measurements. This problem may be exacerbated for concentration data ([micro]g EC/mg SRM), as this requires the deposit to be uniformly distributed over a known area. Once again, there can be confounding if deposits are both variable and near saturation (optically). A fourth potential problem, for optical methods that rely on "return to baseline" transmission to define a split point for thermal pyrolysis correction, could be differences in the effective attenuation coefficient for the initial EC and the absorbing pyrolysate. (It is not known whether such a possibility has been effectively ruled out for thermal-optical techniques.) Clearly, any OC that combusts beyond the presumed split point will mimic EC and lead to an inflat ed value of the latter.

Premature oxidation of EC. The complementary problem is EC loss prior to the presumed EC combustion window. This can lead to negative EC bias, especially for non-optical thermal techniques and for "unusual" sample matrices that can catalyze cat·a·lyze
v.
To modify, especially to increase, the rate of a chemical reaction by catalysis.



catalyze

to cause or produce catalysis.
 BC oxidation at lower temperatures. Oxidizing metal oxides are a case in point (6, 25), as are non-metallic and organic matrix components that can release oxygen during the volatilization cycle. Early oxidation of "Dark OC," such as melanoidins (9), represents another artifact that may mimic premature EC oxidation.

Comparative EC/TC C ratios for the bulk SRM and the prototype filler. EC/TC values in Table 2 are disjoint dis·joint
v.
To put out of joint; dislocate.
 in the sense that many derive from measurements of the bulk SRM 1649a whereas some (italicized) are based on measurements of the prototype filter RM which was prepared by resuspension Noun 1. resuspension - a renewed suspension of insoluble particles after they have been precipitated
suspension - a mixture in which fine particles are suspended in a fluid where they are supported by buoyancy
 of the bulk SRM. Some insight regarding EC/TC intercomparability for the two materials has been given by Teams 8, 10, and 12. Team 8, using TOT, obtained the tabulated value 0.258 [+ or -] 0.014 (n = 3) for the bulk SRM (spread on a filter), compared to 0.264 [+ or -] 0.007 (n = 32) for the ACG prototypes. Team 10, using T340, found decarbonated EC/TC values of: 0.347 [+ or -] 0.026 for the SRM as shown in the table, and 0.385 for prototype filter ACG00l92 (no uncertainty stated). Team 12, using TLT, analyzed three prototypes (ACG00686, ACG00688, and ACG00689) for an average EC/TC value of 0.443 [+ or -] 0.003 (n = 4); a single measurement of the bulk SRM spread on a quartz filter gave 0.416. Results for all three teams po int to a slight enrichment of EC in the prototype filter compared to the SRM, on average by a factor of 1.066 [+ or -] 0.025. Such an enrichment is not to be ignored, but clearly it is trivial compared to the differences among clusters as shown in Fig. 2.

Kinetic Modeling. Two methods, TOK and Ch(Cr)K, explicitly use an empirical kinetic model to fit the observed carbon loss rate function, as a means to partition the total carbon into classes of differing reactivity. According to this model, the most refractory component is taken to be EC. The first method utilizes thermal oxidation and the second, chemical oxidation, but both fit the reaction rate function as a sum of exponentials. The more rapid isothermal oxidation of the TOK method provides sufficient data to estimate the EC component as an intercept, but the slower chemical oxidation of Ch(Cr)K yields only an imprecise estimate of a long lived component, and one is forced to take the residual carbon at the time of the longest exposure (406 h) as an upper limit measure of EC. Given unlimited time, it might be interesting to consider how long it would take the Ch(Cr)K process to attain an intercept comparable to the EC result of the more vigorous Ch(N3) process (hot, concentrated HN[O.sub.3]). The ratio of the BC results for the two procedures is 0.638, equivalent to an extension of just 0.648 half lives of the longer lived component. The total time to reach the EC level of the Ch(N3) procedure would then be 1.053 half-lives, and further reaction time might, in principle yield still smaller EC/TC values for this chemical oxidation technique, perhaps approaching the result of the thermal kinetic oxidation (TOK) technique. The practical problem is that the estimated half life of the longer lived component is 1003 h, so 44 days would be required to approach the EC/TC result of the Ch(N3) procedure! This exercise in arithmetic is meant to highlight the kinetics perspective in attempts to estimate the "true" (asymptotic) value for EC--particularly in the practical application and interpretation of the strictly chemical oxidation techniques.

Kinetics considerations, of course, underlie many of the BC methods, which were developed through comprehensive investigations of the effects of time and temperature. Cases in point are the T340 and T375 methods. The former (15) showed also the quantitative impact of pyrolysis rates on the balance between premature soot loss and charring The impact of the chemical matrix on reactivity in the application of the latter method (26, 30) has special relevance to the intercomparison data in Table 2. This method has the distinction of having the largest number of teams represented in the exercise, and it is one of the simpler methods applied here, having no hybridization hybridization /hy·brid·iza·tion/ (hi?brid-i-za´shun)
1. crossbreeding; the act or process of producing hybrids.

2. molecular hybridization

3.
 with "wet" chemistry or optics. Three of the four results received were within 10 % of one another, whereas the fourth was more than a factor of two higher. Kinetics was suspected to be a factor, for although the prescribed OC oxidation time (at 375[degrees]C) was 24 h, Team 6 used 12 h, indicating that their tests showed it to be equivalent to the longer exposure period. After completion of the intercomparison, however, it was learned that these tests had been performed on SRM 1650, diesel particulate matter Diesel particulate matter (DPM) refers to the particulate components of diesel exhaust, which include diesel soot and aerosols such as ash particulates, metallic abrasion particles, sulfates, and silicates. , rather than SRM 1649a.

Contrasts between identical or similar methods. Finally, in this method-based perusal of EC results, we consider: (1) results from different teams using the same method, (T375, TOT, Ch(N2)T, T340), and (2) results derived from two sets of superficially similar methods, (Ch(N4). Ch(N3)) and (TOT, TOR). The t-statistic was used to test for significant differences between pairs of results in Table 2. For those cases where the "same" method was applied by different participants there was no significant difference among the T375 results of Teams 2, 3, 4; but as noted above the EC/TC result for Team 6, where a shorter oxidation period was used, was significantly greater than the others (p = 0.015, 2-sided test). The pairs of results for Ch(N2)T (Teams 1, 7) and for T340 (Teams 7, 10) were quite comparable; while the somewhat greater difference for the TOT result pair (Teams 8, 18), was marginally significant (p = 0.04).

On the other hand, the two pairs of "similar" methods gave significantly different results: EC/TC by TOR was significantly greater than that given by TOT (p = 0.009); and EC/TC by Ch(N4) was significantly greater than that given by Ch(N3) (p = 0.019). This is important, because it provides an opportunity to gain some insight regarding the underlying causes of such differences. In fact, the TOT-TOR dilemma has been recognized for some time. One might think, that since both techniques have a built-in mechanism for pyrolysis correction, both would be correct, and therefore necessarily self-consistent. We are faced with the question as to just what methodological differences may be responsible for the fact that TOR often gives nearly twice as much EC as TOT. Two stand out: (1) pyrolysis monitoring by reflectance vs transmission, and (2) rather different temperature cycles. (The cycles are similar in that both begin with an anoxic an·ox·i·a  
n.
1. Absence of oxygen.

2. A pathological deficiency of oxygen, especially hypoxia.



[an- + ox(o)- + -ia1.
 thermal volatilization stage that can induce destructive decomposition and charring, and both conclude with a thermal oxidation stage for residual (charred) organic matter and EC.)

A recent comprehensive study of the two methods addressed these questions (6). The key findings of the study are that both of the above procedural differences are consequential, but that the more important difference is the higher first (He) stage peak temperature of TOT (850 [degrees]C) compared to TOR (550 [degrees]C). It was suggested that matrix effects (high temperature catalytic oxidation by certain metal oxides) could result in premature loss of EC in the TOT procedure. Although not mentioned in the report, a contrasting possibility would be the survival of partially charred and polymeric organic material in He at 550 [degrees]C, followed by post split-time coevolution co·ev·o·lu·tion  
n.
The evolution of two or more interdependent species, each adapting to changes in the other. It occurs, for example, between predators and prey and between insects and the flowers that they pollinate.
 of such organic carbon with EC after the switch to oxygen.

The difference between the two acid digestion procedures using hot, concentrated nitric acid nitric acid, chemical compound, HNO3, colorless, highly corrosive, poisonous liquid that gives off choking red or yellow fumes in moist air. It is miscible with water in all proportions.  [Ch(N3), Ch(N4)] was somewhat surprising. The explanation may lie in the comments of Team 13, who noted that the results of Ch(N4) may tend to be high because of the absence of post-oxidation rinses to remove residual organic matter.

4.3 Isotopic ([C.sup.14]) Speciation

Intercomparison data for [C.sup.14] in SRM 1649a are presented in Table 3, in four segments. Results are expressed in terms of the reference state "modern" ([f.sub.M] = 1), which is artifactually defined by reference to the NBS/NIST SRM 4990B, as explained in Sec. 2.3.1. The actual, observed values for [f.sub.M] have been adjusted for decay from the time of collection (1976-1977) to the time of measurement. (Adjustments were quite small because of the long half life of [C.sup.14], 5730 years.) Teams are identified parenthetically par·en·thet·i·cal  
adj. also par·en·thet·ic
1. Set off within or as if within parentheses; qualifying or explanatory: a parenthetical remark.

2. Using or containing parentheses.
 following the respective methods in the first column of the table. Method descriptions and literature references are given in Sec. 3.4. Data in the first segment of the table ("total carbon") reflects the average isotopic composition of the SRM carbon. The following segments give [f.sub.M] values for elemental and organic carbon classes, as well as values for eight individual PAH. The remarkable isotopic heterogeneity of this material is evident; it is an indication of widely dispara te contributions from fossil and biomass carbon sources to the individual chemical fractions.

To give some perspective to the relative fossil and biomass carbon contributions to the several chemical fractions, the data have been transformed to indicate the approximate biomass carbon relative concentrations. This is given by [f.sub.c] (last column) which refers to the fraction of "contemporary" carbon, where contemporary carbon is defined in terms of the [C.sup.14] content of the living biosphere at the time of sampling. (The [f.sub.c] values are given strictly to assist in interpretation of the results; the measured reference values, which are included in the certificate of analysis, must be expressed in terms of [f.sub.M].) [f.sub.c] is derived from [f.sub.M] by taking into account the biospheric [C.sup.14] enhancement factor from atmospheric nuclear testing; at the time of collection for SRM 1649a this factor was approximately 1.35. See Sec. 2.3.2 for further discussion of the "bomb" effect and some additional assumptions involved in the interpretation of the biomass carbon fraction.

Looking at the last column of Table 3, we see that on average, about 38% of the SRM particulate carbon is derived from biomass. In contrast to this TC biomass carbon fraction, which is by definition [f.sub.c] averaged over all carbon species, individual chemical fractions vary dramatically. While the aliphatic fraction derives almost entirely from fossil carbon, the aromatic fraction shows a substantial biomass component (13 % on average). Isotopic diversity within this (aromatic) fraction is strikingly exhibited, however, with individual compounds in the PAH sub-fraction being greater than 90 % fossil in origin.

Some further insight may be gained by considering isotopic-mass balance. It is clear that this cannot be achieved from the carbon fractions thus far measured, as indicated in the biomass fractions ([f.sub.c]) in the table. Although the average (total carbon) biomass contribution is 38 %, all of the measured fractions have smaller values; so there is necessarily a biomass component that has not yet been accounted for. The situation is not so bad for the organic fractions. The biomass contribution to the total extractable carbon (10)--derived from the [f.sub.M] value in the SRM certificate of analysis--is 24%, which is compatible with the range of values seen for polar, aromatic, and aliphatic carbon in the table. Looking deeper in the partition of organic species, we see that the PAH compounds from the aromatic fraction are decidedly more fossil in isotopic composition. They range from roughly 94% fossil for benzo(ghi)perylene to 97% fossil for pyrene. All have a significantly greater biomass component, howeve r, than the aliphatic fraction (98% fossil carbon). The PAHs, of course, account for only a trace fraction of the carbon in the aromatic fraction. The larger biomass component of the aromatic fraction (13%) is supported by data on the specific portions of the "unresolved complex mixture" (ucm) that interfered with an early attempt to determine [C.sup.14] in individual PAH ([54]; see especially the note added in proof). Application of isotopic mass balance equations to the ucm that was isolated with the benzo(ghi)perylene peak gave a biomass carbon contribution of [approximately equal to] = 15%.

The question of the missing biomass carbon in the non-extractable fraction of SRM 1649a is important, and some initial considerations will be presented elsewhere [56]. If one assumes that the non-extractable fraction comprises EC and polymeric carbon sub-fractions, then using two-stage isotopic-mass balance equations, it can be shown that the biomass carbon contribution to the polymeric component is 47% if the EC biomass fraction is 4.8% as given by the "thermal oxidation/residue" method for [EC-.sup.14]C; or 92 %, if the EC biomass fraction is 11.3% as given by the "chemical oxidation/residue" method for [EC-.sup.14]C. The difference makes a strong case for devising an experiment to determine [C.sup.14] in non-extractable, polymeric fractions of the carbonaceous particles.

Finally, the biomass fractions of the PAHs raise some interesting questions. First, there is the similarity between [f.sub.c] of the "thermal oxidation/residue" EC method (0.048) and those of the PAHs (0.028 to 0.064). This makes a compelling, though circumstantial EVIDENCE, CIRCUMSTANTIAL. The proof of facts which usually attend other facts sought to be, proved; that which is not direct evidence. For example, when a witness testifies that a man was stabbed with a knife, and that a piece of the blade was found in the wound, and it is found to fit  argument that both may represent products of high temperature combustion. Secondly, the somewhat larger biomass carbon contributions to the heavier PAH [0.064 for benzo(ghi)perylene] seem to belie be·lie  
tr.v. be·lied, be·ly·ing, be·lies
1. To picture falsely; misrepresent: "He spoke roughly in order to belie his air of gentility" James Joyce.
 the conventional wisdom that the higher molecular weight PAH are necessarily products of fossil fuel fossil fuel: see energy, sources of; fuel.
fossil fuel

Any of a class of materials of biologic origin occurring within the Earth's crust that can be used as a source of energy. Fossil fuels include coal, petroleum, and natural gas.
 combustion. Prior laboratory studies, however, comparing PAH patterns from flaming combustion of oak, pine, and paraffin fuels, support the observations here, demonstrating significant emissions of benzo(ghi)perylene from biomass burning (pine, but not oak) (54).

5. Conclusion and Summary

Cooperation among 18 teams of experts participating in an international comparison of Particulate Carbon species in SRM 1649a has resulted in the generation of important data on Total Carbon (certified value), Elemental Carbon (information values), and Isotopic Carbon ([C.sup.14] Speciation; reference and information values). The two-fold outcome of this exercise has been: (1) production of particulate carbon analytical data for the new (2001) Certificate of Analysis for SRM 1649a, and (2) generation of critical information linking details of analytical methodology to ranges of intercomparison data, especially for the ratio EC/TC, and linking isotopic speciation data with EC data and methodology. A byproduct by·prod·uct or by-prod·uct  
n.
1. Something produced in the making of something else.

2. A secondary result; a side effect.

Noun 1.
 of the work on EC/TC was comparative data on the two intercomparison materials: the (bulk) SRM, per se, and the prototype ACG filter RM, which had been prepared by resuspending the bulk SRM in air.

A number of observations, drawn from the critique of the EC/TC results vs methodology, are summarized in Appendix 1. Three of the key observations are: (1) The extremely broad range of results, obtained by expert teams working with a homogeneous reference material, reflect in part imperfectly understood/corrected methodological artifacts (chemical and mechanical losses, incomplete reaction, charring), but perhaps more significantly the fact that environmental EC is not a pure substance. Therefore, different methods tend to measure different characteristics of this very complex material, which may range from pyrogenic pyrogenic /py·ro·gen·ic/ (pi?ro-jen´ik) febrifacient; causing fever.

py·ro·gen·ic or py·rog·e·nous
adj.
1. Producing or produced by fever.

2.
 "soot" at the one extreme to lower temperature pyrolysis "char" at the other. (2) There is the possibility, however, of achieving method-specific (operational) EC/TC reference values for specific reference materials (such as SRM 1649a). This is supported by the fact that three distinctive methods, applied by multiple teams, gave excellent within-method consistency. (3) In the light of team comme nts on possible artifacts specific to their methods, and the distribution of intercomparison results, we see the possibility of deconfounding artifactual ar·ti·fact also ar·te·fact  
n.
1. An object produced or shaped by human craft, especially a tool, weapon, or ornament of archaeological or historical interest.

2.
 EC from intrinsic differences related to analysis of more or less refractory regions of the "black carbon spectrum."

Isotopic ([C.sup.14]) speciation adds a new dimension to the understanding of methodological differences and sources of individual chemical species in an isotopically heterogeneous reference material or environmental sample (Fig. 1, Table 3). The quest for Verb 1. quest for - go in search of or hunt for; "pursue a hobby"
quest after, go after, pursue

look for, search, seek - try to locate or discover, or try to establish the existence of; "The police are searching for clues"; "They are searching for the
 isotopic mass balance, and complete isotopic speciation, generates challenging questions when that balance has not been achieved. In the present case, the combination of [C-EC.sup.14] and chemical (EC/TC) data by two significantly different EC methods [T375, Ch(Cr)K], led to a pair of estimates for the, as yet uncharacterized, polymeric fraction of the SRM. The resulting bounds for biomass carbon in the polymeric fraction were 47 % and 92 %, respectively, the latter figure being especially intriguing in view of work that has been done on natural biopolymers in atmospheric aerosol (57, 58, 59). Equally interesting is the fact that the [C.sup.14] speciation in EC, isolated by the refractory "soot carbon" technique found in cluster group-1, was fully consiste nt with the predominately fossil carbon origin of the individual PAHs. Isotopic consistency should be expected, as both PAHs and EC-soot are known products/tracers of flaming (or exploding) high temperature combustion.

6. Appendix 1. Critique of EC Methodologies and Results

Some tentative generalizations follow from the interlaboratory, intermethod study of EC/TC ratios in a single homogeneous reference material (and its prototypical filter offspring).

* The fact that EC is not a pure substance means that the more vigorous oxidizing methods (e.g., T375) are more suited to analysis of the highly resistant (refractory) component of EC (soot), and other, gentler methods of thermal and/or chemical oxidation may be considered appropriate for assaying the more labile component (char).

* The corollary is that we should not expect to find a single correct value for EC in SRM 1649a, nor a single correct method; and comparative results are likely to be both method- and matrix-dependent.

* Significant inter-team differences did not appear for three rather diverse methods [T375, Ch(N2)T, T340], however, in the absence of protocol deviations (Sec. 4.2.2). As a result, there is a good possibility that selected method-specific reference values can be established.

* The EC/TC ratio of the prototype filter RM appears to exceed that of the bulk SRM, but only to a small extent ([approximately equal to] 6 % relative).

* Sensitivity to reaction time (kinetics) and thermal regime/cycle deviations is critical for certain methods. Exhaustive interlaboratory investigations of optimal values and tolerable deviations may be essential for method certification.

* Matrix effects and artifacts require special vigilance: especially premature EC oxidation, coevolution of refractory (polymeric) organic carbon in the EC (thermal oxidation) peak, excessive optical density, optical attenuation coefficient variations, char formation from natural polymers, and pyrolysis correction accuracy. Such artifacts may lie at the heart of the discrepancies among "similar" methods, such as those found in clusters 2 and 3 of Fig. 2.

* SRM 1649a has a significant potential for charring, presumably pre·sum·a·ble  
adj.
That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster.
 from high molecular weight biopolymers. Pyrolysis carbon (char) produced in the TOT procedure was found to be comparable to the EC component itself. This means that special attention may be needed for those procedures that do not monitor charring, and to the accuracy of the charring correction, for those procedures that do.

* Accurate results for very small (sub-mg) samples demand exhaustive attention to microheterogeneity of materials, plus procedural blanks and particle loss, especially for isotopic speciation at the 10 [micro]g to 100 [micro]g (C) level.

* Finally, there is the matter of chemical and geochemical isotopic consistency. A striking illustration is given by comparison of the [C.sup.14] abundance of "soot" EC with that of other pyrogenic products such as the PAH (Table 3). See also Ref. (30) Sec. 3.2.

7. Appendix 2. Team Members

Team-1: Slater

Team-2: Hedges, Prentice

Team-3: Gustafsson

Team-4: Reddy

Team-5: Currie, Kessler

Team-6: Hartmann, Quinn

Team-7: Marolf, Currie

Team-8: Cary

Team-9: Klinedinst, Klouda

Team-10: Cachier

Team-11: Chow, Watson

Team-12: Puxbaum, Schmid

Team-13: Masiello, Druffel

Team-14: Kirchstetter, Novakov

Team-15: Benner, Eglinton, Pearson, Reddy, Wise

Team-16: Currie, Klouda, Wise

Team-17: Klinedinst

Team-18: Klouda

[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]

[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]
Table 1

Individual Results for Total Carbon (TC) in SRM 1649a

Method             Team  TC (a) (w)  u (w)    n

A. Combust(TOT)      8     0.1753    0.0046   3
B. Combust(GCTCD)   18     0.1778    0.0014  39
C. Combust(NDIR)     9     0.1766    0.0017  15
D. Combust(CHN)      6     0.1769    0.0016  10
E. Combust(CHN)      3     0.1760    0.0019   4
A. Combust(TOT)      5     0.1745    0.0067   2
E. Combust(2step)   10     0.1760    0.0029   4

(a)Mass fraction (w, in kg/kg)
Table 2

Individual Results for Elemental Carbon in SRM 1649a

Row  Method    Team  EC/TC  u(EC/TC)                            N

 1   AETH        1   0.069   0.004                              4
 2   T375        2   0.074   0.002    [greater than or equal to]2
 3   T375        3   0.077   0.002                              3
 4   T375        4   0.079   0.005                              3
 5   TOK         5   0.109   0.005                              9
 6   T375        6   0.187   0.013                              6
 7   TOT        18   0.200   0.005                              4
 8   Ch(N1)T     7   0.224   0.013                              5
 9   TOT         8   0.258   0.014                              3
10   Ch(N2)T     7   0.280   0.004                              6
11   Ch(N2)T     1   0.283   0.022                              3
12   Ch(N3)      9   0.292   0.017                              5
13   T340        7   0.346   0.025                              5
14   T340       10   0.347   0.026                              4
15   TOR        11   0.432   0.009                              3
16   TLT        12   0.438   0.006                              5
17   Ch(Cr)K    13   0.458   0.025                              9
18   T500_EGA   14   0.500   0.010                              2
19   Ch(N4)     13   0.520   0.057                              3

Notes

EC/TC: Italics denote measurements on ACG prototype filters.

Row-6: T375 oxidation time 12 h, rather 24 h.

Row-7: TOT tabulated result is for the bulk SRM; filter (ACG) result
[Team 5] is 0.210 (u = 0.007, n = 7).

Row-8: Ch(N1)T result for small samples; possibility of particle loss.

Row-9: TOT tabulated result is for the bulk SRM; filter (ACG) result is
0.264 (n = 32).

Row-14: T340 tabulated result is for the bulk SRM; filter (ACG) result
is 0.385 (n = 1).

Row-16: TLT tabulated result is the average of five results reported by
Team 12. Separate results for the bulk SRM and filter (ACG) are 0.416 (n
= 1) and 0.443 (n = 4).

Row-18: T500 tabulated result is upper limit, because of possible OC
co-evolution; OC solvent removal result, 0.40, is a lower limit, because
of particle loss.
Table 3

SRM 1649a Isotopic ([C.sup.14]) Speciation

                                   [f.sub.M] (modern-C)

Total Carbon (Team)

  Combustion-Manometry (16)               0.61
  [H.sub.3][PO.sub.4]-                    0.505
  Combustion-Manometry (13)
  Combustion-GC-CHN (17)                  0.517

Elemental Carbon (Team)

  Thermal oxidation/residue (4)           0.065
  Chemical oxidation/residue (13)         0.153
  Thermal kinetic oxidation/              0.038
  intercept (5)

Organic Fractions (Team)

  Polar Carbon (4, 15)                    0.43
  Aromatic Carbon (16)                    0.17
  Aliphatic Carbon (4, 15)                0.024

Individual PAH (Teams = 4, 15)

  Phenanthrene                            0.0406
  Methylphenanthracenes                   0.0434
  Fluoranthene                            0.0637
  Pyrene                                  0.0372
  Benz[a]anthracene                       0.0413
  Chrysene/Triphenylene                   0.0553
  Benzofluoranthenes (b,j,k)              0.0842
  Benzo[ghi]perylene                      0.0864

                                   u([f.sub.M]) (a)

Total Carbon (Team)

  Combustion-Manometry (16)             0.04
  [H.sub.3][PO.sub.4]-                  0.003
  Combustion-Manometry (13)
  Combustion-GC-CHN (17)                0.004

Elemental Carbon (Team)

  Thermal oxidation/residue (4)         0.003 (n = 3)
  Chemical oxidation/residue (13)       0.002
  Thermal kinetic oxidation/            0.012
  intercept (5)

Organic Fractions (Team)

  Polar Carbon (4, 15)                  0.01
  Aromatic Carbon (16)                  0.04
  Aliphatic Carbon (4, 15)              0.006

Individual PAH (Teams = 4, 15)

  Phenanthrene                          0.0049
  Methylphenanthracenes                 0.0057
  Fluoranthene                          0.0026
  Pyrene                                0.0022
  Benz[a]anthracene                     0.0037
  Chrysene/Triphenylene                 0.0030
  Benzofluoranthenes (b,j,k)            0.0027
  Benzo[ghi]perylene                    0.0046

                                   [f.sub.c] (biomass-C)

Total Carbon (Team)

  Combustion-Manometry (16)               0.45
  [H.sub.3][PO.sub.4]-                    0.374
  Combustion-Manometry (13)
  Combustion-GC-CHN (17)                  0.383

Elemental Carbon (Team)

  Thermal oxidation/residue (4)           0.048
  Chemical oxidation/residue (13)         0.113
  Thermal kinetic oxidation/              0.028
  intercept (5)

Organic Fractions (Team)

  Polar Carbon (4, 15)                    0.32
  Aromatic Carbon (16)                    0.13
  Aliphatic Carbon (4, 15)                0.018

Individual PAH (Teams = 4, 15)

  Phenanthrene                            0.0301
  Methylphenanthracenes                   0.0321
  Fluoranthene                            0.0472
  Pyrene                                  0.0276
  Benz[a]anthracene                       0.0306
  Chrysene/Triphenylene                   0.0410
  Benzofluoranthenes (b,j,k)              0.0624
  Benzo[ghi]perylene                      0.0640

(a)Poisson standard uncertainties (u) are given for all [f.sub.M] values
except the first EC datum, where u is based on replication (n = 3)


Acknowledgment

One purpose of this manuscript is to serve as a basic reference document for particulate carbon data and methodology presented in the Certificate of Analysis for SRM 1649a (Jan. 2001). As a result, selected portions of the data and text appear in both documents. Accelerator measurements were performed at the NSF NSF - National Science Foundation  AMS Facility, University of Arizona (body, education) University of Arizona - The University was founded in 1885 as a Land Grant institution with a three-fold mission of teaching, research and public service. , Tucson, AZ; Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, CA, and the National Ocean Sciences AMS Facility, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, at Woods Hole, Mass.; est. 1930. In addition to oceanographic research, it conducts important work in meteorology, biology, geology, and geophysics. , Woods Hole, MA. The work reported here is an outgrowth of a preliminary intercomparison presented at the Symposium on Black Carbon in the Environment, 9th Annual Goldschmidt Conference, Cambridge, MA (22-27 Aug. 1999) [3].

Accepted: March 13, 2002

(1.) Note that three data quality descriptors arc used in NIST Certificates of Analysis [2, 12]. An NIST certified value is a value for which NIST has the highest confidence in its accuracy, in that all known or suspected sources of bias have been investigated or accounted for. Reference values are noncertified values that represent best estimates of the true values; however, these values do not meet the NIST criteria for certification and are provided with associated uncertainties that may reflect only measurement precision, may not include all sources of uncertainty, or may reflect a lack of sufficient statistical agreement among multiple analytical methods. An information value is considered to be a value that will be of use to the SRM customer, but which has insufficient information to assess its associated uncertainty or for which only a limited number of analyses were performed. (For the "particulate carbon" section of the SRM 1649a Certificate of Analysis, Tables 12 and 13, the limiting number of analy ses is taken to be two. That is, when uncertainties were derived from replication ("type A" uncertainties), the results were designated information values unless the number of replicates (n) was three or more.)

(2.) Support for the earlier data for carbonate carbon came as a byproduct of the present intercomparison, from four pairs of replicate measurements of SRM 1649a TC, with and without carbonate removal, by Team 10. Results for TC (gig) were 0.1735 ([micro] = 0.0023), non--decarbonated; and 0.1760 ([micro] = 0.0029), decarbonated. The difference is -0.0025 ([micro] = 0.0037) g/g; hence no carbonate-C was detected, but the upper limit is consistent with the prior Information Value.

(3.) The stable isotope stable isotope
n.
An isotope of an element that shows no tendency to undergo radioactive breakdown.
 [C.sup.13] has a role in source discrimination and the control of isotopic mass balance, but its importance in atmospheric studies is overshadowed by that of [C.sup.14], largely because it lacks the remarkable (fossil-biomass) source discrimination power of [C.sup.14]. The combination of both isotopes can be useful in special cases, however, as in the discrimination of fossil-C sources from [C.sup.3] and [C.sup.4] biomass sources [17]. [C.sup.13] did not constitute a major part of this SRM 1649a intercomparison, partly for the above reasons, and partly because of the stringent measures that would be required to minimize errors from isotopic fractionation.

(4.) Minor differences in TOT temperature profiles are found in different laboratories, using the same basic ("Sunset") instrument described in Ref. (24). For the NIST instrument used by Teams 5 and 18: the volatilization (He) profile had steps of 200 [degrees]C, 380 [degrees]C, 560 [degrees]C, and 900 [degrees]C; and the oxidation (5 % [O.sub.2] in He) profile had steps of 600 [degrees]C, 700 [degrees]C, 850 [degrees]C, and 900 [degrees]C.

(5) First stage thermal oxidation (340 [degrees]C) in the closed tube gave the possibility of trapping (rather than evacuating) the first-stage OC gases in the small sample AMS target preparation apparatus for those cases where [C.sup.14] AMS was applied to both the [OC.sub.340] and the EC carbon from the same sample. It is especially useful when the TS340 procedure is adapted for OC, EC [C.sup.14] speciation [38].

(6.) Note that all uncertainties given in this manuscript are standard uncertainties (u). For those based on replication ("type A" uncertainties), corresponding expanded uncertainties (U) in the certificate of analysis for SRM 1649a are given by t(df, 0.025)u as recommended in the ISO (1) See ISO speed.

(2) (International Organization for Standardization, Geneva, Switzerland, www.iso.ch) An organization that sets international standards, founded in 1946. The U.S. member body is ANSI.
 guide for the expression of uncertainty (16).

(7.) See Appendix 1 for a summary critique of the EC/TC data and the methods employed.

(8.) The essentially boundless spectrum of organic functionalities and structural characteristics comprising BC [30, 55] makes the question of a single correct analytical result ill-posed. In contrast to a complete chemical and structural characterization of each sample, simpler thermal and chemical methods of analysis would be expected to reflect different aspects of the material, ranging from partially condensed con·dense  
v. con·densed, con·dens·ing, con·dens·es

v.tr.
1. To reduce the volume or compass of.

2. To make more concise; abridge or shorten.

3. Physics
a.
 pyrolysis carbon (char) to highly condensed pyrogenic structures (polyaromatic soot).

(9) The caution against over-interpretation will be seen to be well advised by the subsequent discussion of sample and methodological artifacts, which occupies much of the remainder of this section. In fact, consideration of the comparative results in light of possible artifacts in the associated methods may be one of the most important outcomes of this broad intercomparison exercise.

(10.) Extractable carbon was not included in this intercomparison, but results for its mass fraction (different solvents) are given in Tables 11 and 12 of the Certificate of Analysis, and its [f.sub.M] value appears in Table 13 [2].

8. References

(1.) NIST Certificate of Analysis, Standard Reference Material (SRM) 1649, Urban Dust/Organics, National Institute of Standards and Technology National Institute of Standards and Technology, governmental agency within the U.S. Dept. of Commerce with the mission of "working with industry to develop and apply technology, measurements, and standards" in the national interest. , Gaithersburg, MD, 1982.

(2.) NIST Certificate of Analysis, Standard Reference Material (SRM) 1649a, Urban Dust, National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg, MD (31 Jan. 2001).

(3.) Goldschmidt, Symposium on Block Carbon in the Environment, Organizers: M. W. I. Schmidt, O. Gustafsson, and J. Hedges, Ninth Annual Goldschmidt Conference, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA (1999).

(4.) G. A. Klouda, D. D. Klinedinst, E. B. Steel, B. A. Benner, Jr., and H. J. Parish, Exploring a Method to Produce an Urban Dust Particle Filter This article is about the statistical method. For the pollution control device, see diesel particulate filter.

Particle filters, also known as Sequential Monte Carlo methods (SMC), are sophisticated model estimation techniques based on simulation.
 Standard, J. Aerosol Sci. Suppl. 1 27, S351-S352 (1996).

(5.) H, Schmid, L. Laskus, H. J. Abraham, U. Baltensberger, V. Lavanchy, M. Bizjak, P. Burba, H. Cachier, D. Crow, J. Chow, T. Gnauk, A. Even, H. M. ten Brink, K-P. Giesen, R. Hitzenberger, C. Hueglin, W. Maenhaut, C. Pio, J-P, Putaud, D. ToomSauntry, and H. Puxbaum, Results of the "Carbon Conference" International Aerosol Carbon Round Robin Test Stage I, Atm. Environ. 35, 2111-2121 (2001).

(6.) J. C. Chow, J. G. Watson, D. Crow, D. H. Lowenthal, and T. Merrifield, Comparison of IMPROVE and NIOSH NIOSH National Institute for Occupational Safety & Health, see there

NIOSH Recommendations for Safety & Health Standards

Agent  NIOSH REL*/OSHA PEL  Health effects
 Carbon Measurements, Aerosol Sci. Technol. 34, 23-34 (2001).

(7.) R. Hitzenberger, S. G. Jennings, S. M. Larson, A. Dillner, H. Cachier, Z. Galambos, A. Rouc, and T. G. Spain, Intercomparison of measurement methods for black carbon aerosols, Atm. Environ. 33, 2823-2833 (1999).

(8.) M. W. I. Schmidt, J. O. Skjemstad, C. I. Czimczik, B. Glaser, K. I. Prentice, Y. Gelinas, and T. A. J. Kuhlbusch, Comparative analysis of black carbon in soils, Global Biogeochem. Cycles 15, 163-167 (2001).

(9.) C. Masiello and M. W. I. Schmidt, (co-chairs), International Steering Committee for Black Carbon Reference Materials (http://www.du.edu/~dwismith/besteer.html) (1999).

(10.) S. H. Cadle and P.J. Groblicki, An Evaluation of Methods for the Determination of Organic and Elemental Carbon in Particulate Samples, Particulate Carbon: Atmospheric Life Cycle, G. T. Wolff and R. L. Klimisch, eds., Plenum Press: New York-London (1982) pp. 89-109.

(11.) G. T. Wolff and R. L. Klimisch, eds., Particulate Carbon: Atmospheric Life Cycle, Preface, Plenum Press, New York-London (1982).

(12.) W. May, R. Parris, C. Beck, J. Fassett, R. Greenberg, F. Guenther, G. Kramer, S. Wise, T. Gills, J. Colbert, R. Gettings, and B. MacDonald, Definitions of terms and modes used at NIST for value-assignment of reference materials for chemical measurements, NIST Special Publ. 260-136, NIST, Gaithersburg, MD (2000).

(13.) C. O. Ingamells and P. Switzer, A proposed sampling constant for use in geochemical analysis, Talanta 20, 547-568 (1973).

(14.) L. A. Gundel, R. L. Dod, H. Rosen, and T. Novakov, The relationship between optical attenuation and black carbon concentration for ambient and source particles, Sci. Total Environ. 36, 197-202 (1984].

(15.) H. Cachier, M. P. Bremond, and P. Buat-Menard, Determination of atmospheric soot carbon with a simple thermal method, Tellus 41B, 379-390 (1989).

(16.) International Organization for Standardization International Organization for Standardization (ISO)

Organization for determining standards in most technical and nontechnical fields. Founded in Geneva in 1947, its membership includes more than 100 countries.
, Guide to the Expression of Uncertainty in Measurement, ISO, Geneva Geneva, canton and city, Switzerland
Geneva (jənē`və), Fr. Genève, canton (1990 pop. 373,019), 109 sq mi (282 sq km), SW Switzerland, surrounding the southwest tip of the Lake of Geneva.
, Switzerland (1993).

(17.) L. A. Currie, Evolution and Multidisciplinary Frontiers of [C.sup.14] Aerosol Science, Radiocarbon 42, 115-126 (2000).

(18.) I. Karlen, I. U. Olsson, P. Kallberg, and S. Killici, Absolute determination of the activity of two [C.sup.14] dating standards, Ark. Geofys. 4, 465 (1964).

(19.) M. Stuiver and H. Polach, Reporting of [C.sup.14] Data, Radiocarbon 19, 355-363 (1977).

(20.) G. Hut, Consultants Group Meeting on Stable Isotope Reference Samples for Geochemical and Hydrological hy·drol·o·gy  
n.
The scientific study of the properties, distribution, and effects of water on the earth's surface, in the soil and underlying rocks, and in the atmosphere.
 Investigations, International Atomic Energy Agency International Atomic Energy Agency: see Atomic Energy Agency, International.
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)

International organization officially founded in 1957 to promote the peaceful use of nuclear energy.
, Vienna, Austria (1987) p. 42.

(21.) I. Levin and B. Kromer, Twenty years TWENTY YEARS. The lapse of twenty years raises a presumption of certain facts, and after such a time, the party against whom the presumption has been raised, will be required to prove a negative to establish his rights.
     2.
 of atmospheric [CO.sup.14.sub.2] observations at Schauinsland Station, Germany, Radiocarbon 39, 205-218 (1997).

(22.) L. A. Currie, T. W. Stafford, A. E. Sheffield, G. A. Klouda, S. A. Wise, R. A. Fletcher, D. J. Donahue, A. J. T. Jull, and T. W. Linick, Microchemical mi·cro·chem·is·try  
n.
Chemistry that deals with minute quantities of materials, frequently less than one milligram in mass or one milliliter in volume.



mi
 and Molecular Dating, Radiocarbon 31, 448-463 (1989).

(23.) G. A. Klouda, L. A. Currie, R. W. Gerlach, R. E. Continetti, and G. B. Tompkins, Estimating the Impact of Atmospheric Carbonaceous Particulates on Urban and Rural Environments by Radiocarbon Measurements, Proc. of Residential Wood and Coal Combustion Specialty Conference of the Air Pollution Control Association (1982) pp. 189-206.

(24.) M. E. Birch and R. A. Cary, Elemental Carbon-Based Method for Monitoring Occupational Exposures to Particulate Diesel Exhaust, Aerosol Sci. Technol. 25, 221-241 (1996).

(25.) G. A. Klouda, 2001, unpublished data.

(26.) O. Gustafsson, F. Haghseta, C. Chan, J. MacFarlane MacFarlane or Macfarlane is a surname shared by:
  • Alan Macfarlane (born 1941), a professor of anthropological science at Cambridge University
  • Alexander Macfarlane (mathematician) (1851-1913), a Scottish-Canadian logician, physicist, and mathematician
, and P. Gschwend, Quantification of the Dilute Sedimentary Soot Phase: Implications for PAH Speciation and Bioavailability bioavailability /bio·avail·a·bil·i·ty/ (bi?o-ah-val?ah-bil´i-te) the degree to which a drug or other substance becomes available to the target tissue after administration.

bi·o·a·vail·a·bil·i·ty
n.
, Environ. Sci. Technol. 31, 203-209 (1997).

(27.) A. D. A. Hansen, H. Rosen, and T. Novakov, The aethalometer--an instrument for the real-time measurement of optical absorption by aerosol particles, Sci Total Environ 36, 191-196 (1984).

(28.) C. Liousse, H. Cachier, and S. G. Jennings, Optical and thermal measurements of black carbon aerosol content in different environments: variation of the specific attenuation cross section, sigma ([sigma]), Atm Environ. 27A, 1203-1211 (1993).

(29.) A. Petzold and R. Niessner, Intercomparison study on soot-selective methods--field study results from several polluted pol·lute  
tr.v. pol·lut·ed, pol·lut·ing, pol·lutes
1. To make unfit for or harmful to living things, especially by the addition of waste matter. See Synonyms at contaminate.

2.
 areas in Germany, J. Aerosol. Sci. (Suppl. 1) 26, S393-S394 (1995).

(30.) O. Gustafsson, T. Bucheli, Z. Kokulska, M. Andersson, C. Largeau, J-N. Rouzaud, C. Reddy, and T. Eglinton, Evaluation of a protocol for the quantification of black carbon in sediments, Global Biogeochem. Cycles 15, 881-890 (2001).

(31.) H. Puxbaum, Thermo-Gasanalysator zur Charakterisierung von Kohlenstoff- und Schwefelverbindungen in luftgetragenen Stauben, Fresenius Z Anal. Chem. 298, 250-259 (1979).

(32.) H. Puxbaum, Application of two Thermo-Gasanalyzers for atmospheric aerosol characterization, Intern intern /in·tern/ (in´tern) a medical graduate serving in a hospital preparatory to being licensed to practice medicine.

in·tern or in·terne
n.
. J. Environ. Anal. Chem. 10, 1-6 (1981).

(33.) L. A. Currie and S. D. Kessler, Thermal optical isotopic analysis of elemental carbon in carbonaceous particles, Symposium on Black Carbon in the Environment, Ninth Annual Goldschmidt Conference, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, Paper No. 7148 (1999).

(34.) L. A. Currie and S. D. Kessler, Thermal optical kinetic approach to isotopic analysis of elemental aerosol carbon (2002) manuscript.

(35.) T. A. J. Kuhlbusch, Method for Determining Black Carbon in Residues of Vegetation Fires, Environ. Sci. Technol. 29 (10), 2695-2702 (1995).

(36.) L. A. Currie, J. D. Kessler, J. V. Marolf, A. P. McNichol, D. R. Stuart, J. C. Donoghue, D. J. Donahue, G. S. Burr, and D. Biddulph, Low-level (submicromole) environmental [C.sup.14] metrology, Nuel. Instrum. Meth. Phys. Res. B172, 440-448 (2000).

(37.) L. A. Currie, S. E. Dibb, G. A. Klouda, B. A. Benner, J. M. Conny, S. R. Biegalski, D. B. Klinedinst, D. R. Cahoon, and N. C. Hsu, The pursuit of isotopic and molecular fire tracers in the polar atmosphere and cryosphere, Radiocarbon 40, 381-390, 416f (1998).

(38.) S.R. Biegalski, L. A. Currie, R. A. Fletcher, G. A. Klouda, and R. Weissenbok, AMS and Microprobe microprobe /mi·cro·probe/ (mi´kro-prob?) a minute probe, as one used in microsurgery.

microprobe

a minute probe, such as one used in microsurgery.
 Analysis of Combusted Particles in Ice and Snow, Radiocarbon 40, 3-10 (1998).

(39.) J. V. Marolf, Internal NIST Technical Report #7 (19 Aug. 1998).

(40.) J. F. Slater, Internal NIST Technical Report (Sept.-Oct. 1998).

(41.) H. Schultz, Studies in Radiocarbon Dating. PhD thesis, The Pennsylvania State University Pennsylvania State University, main campus at University Park, State College; land-grant and state supported; coeducational; chartered 1855, opened 1859 as Farmers' High School. , State College, PA 1962.

(42.) C. A. Masiello, E. R. M. Druffel, and L. A. Currie, Radiocarbon measurements of black carbon in aerosols and ocean sediments, Geochim. Cosmochim. Act. 66, 1025-1036 (2002).

(43.) W. S. Wolbach and E. Anders, Elemental carbon in sediments: determination and isotopic analysis in the presence of kerogen kerogen
 or kerogen shales or kerogenites

Complex mixture of compounds with large molecules containing mainly hydrogen and carbon but also oxygen, nitrogen, and sulfur. Kerogen is a precursor of petroleum and the organic component of oil shales.
, Geochim. Cosmochim. Act, 53, 1637-1647 (1989).

(44.) D. J. Verardo, Charcoal analysis in marine sediments, Limnol. Oceanogr. 42 (1), 192-197 (1997).

(45.) L. A. Currie, S. M. Kunen, K. J. Voorhees, R. B. Murphy, and W. F. Koch, Analysis of Carbonaceous Particulates and Characterization of Their Sources by Low-level Radiocarbon Counting and Pyrolysis/Gas Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry spectrometry /spec·trom·e·try/ (spek-trom´e-tre) determination of the wavelengths or frequencies of the lines in a spectrum.

spec·trom·e·try
n.
, in Proceedings of the Conf. on Carbonaceous Particles in the Atmosphere, T. Novakov, ed., Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, University of California The University of California has a combined student body of more than 191,000 students, over 1,340,000 living alumni, and a combined systemwide and campus endowment of just over $7.3 billion (8th largest in the United States). , June 1979.

(46.) L. A. Currie, G. A. Klouda, and K. J. Voorhees, Atmospheric Carbon: The Importance of Accelerator Mass Spectrometry, Nucl. Instrum. Methods Phys. Res. 233 (B5), 371-379 (1984).

(47.) C. A. Masiello and E. R. M. Druffel, Black carbon in deep sea sediments, Science 280, 1911-1913 (1998).

(48.) L. A. Currie, D. B. Klinedinst, R. Burch, N. Feltham, and R. Dorsch, Authentication (1) Verifying the integrity of a transmitted message. See message integrity, e-mail authentication and MAC.

(2) Verifying the identity of a user logging into a network.
 and Dating of Biomass Components of Industrial Materials; Links to Sustainable Technology, Nuel. Instrum. Meth. Phys. Res. B172, 281-287 (2000).

(49.) D. J. Donahue, J. W Beck, G. S. Burr, C. Courtney, P. E. Damon, A. L. Hatheway, L. Hewitt, A. J. T. Jull, T. Lange, N. Lifton, R. Maddock, L. R. McHargue, J. M. O'Malley, and L. J. Toolin, Status of the NSF-Arizona AMS Laboratory, Noel. Instrum. Methods Phys. Res. B123, 51-56 (1997).

(50.) C. M. Reddy, A. Pearson, L. Xu, A. P. McNichol, B. A. Benner, Jr., S. A. Wise, G. A. Klouda, L. A. Currie, and T. I. Eglinton, Radiocarbon as a tool to apportion ap·por·tion  
tr.v. ap·por·tioned, ap·por·tion·ing, ap·por·tions
To divide and assign according to a plan; allot: "The tendency persists to apportion blame as suits the circumstances" 
 sources of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and black carbon in environmental samples, Environ. Sci. Technol. 36, 1774-1782 (2002).

(51.) S. A. Wise, S. N. Chesler, H. S. Hertz, L. R. Hilpert, and W. E. May, Chemically-Bonded Aminosilane Stationary Phase The term stationary phase may refer to
  • Chromatography, in chemistry.
  • The stationary phase approximation in the evaluation of integrals in mathematics.
  • The method of steepest descent in the evaluation of integrals in mathematics.
  • A phase in bacterial growth.
 for the High Performance Liquid Chromatographic Separation of Polynuclear polynuclear /poly·nu·cle·ar/ (-noo?kle-er) having several nuclei; said of cells.

pol·y·nu·cle·ar or pol·y·nu·cle·ate or pol·y·nu·cle·at·ed
adj.
Multinuclear.
 Aromatic Hydrocarbons, Anal. Chem. 49, 2306-2310 (1977).

(52.) T. I. Eglinton, L. I. Aluwihare, J. E. Bauer, E. R. M. Druffel, and A. P. McNichol, Gas Chromatographic Isolation of Individual Compounds from Complex Matrices for Radiocarbon Dating, Anal. Chem. 68, 904-912 (1996).

(53.) L. A. Currie, T. I. Eglinton, B. A. Benner, Jr., and A. Pearson, Radiocarbon Dating of Individual Chemical Compounds in Atmospheric Aerosol: First Results Comparing Direct Isotopic and Multivariate Statistical Apportionment of Specific Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons, Nucl. Instrum. Meth. Phys. Res. B123, 475-486 (1997).

(54.) L. A. Currie, G. A. Klouda, B. A. Benner, Jr., K. Garrity, and T. I. Eglinton, Isotopic and Molecular Fractionation in Combustion; Three Routes to Molecular Marker Molecular marker is a term with a number of uses. It is any kind of molecule indicating the existence of a chemical or physical process. In particular, in the fields of geology and astrobiology, biomarkers (also known as biosignatures) are sometimes understood as molecules  Validation, Including Direct Molecular 'Dating' (GC/MS GC/MS Gas Chromatograph/Mass Spectrometer
GC/MS Gas Chromatograph/Mass Spectrometry
GC/MS Gas Chromatograph/Mass Spectrograph
), Atm. Environ. 33, 2789-2806 (1999).

(55.) M. S. Akhtar, A. R. Chughtai, and D. W. Smith, The structure of hexane soot, Appl. Spectrose. 39, 143-153 (1985).

(56.) L. A. Currie, 2001, unpublished work.

(57.) M. Kunit and H. Puxbaum, Enzymatic determination of the cellulose content of atmospheric aerosols, Atmos. Environ. 30, 1233-1236 (1996).

(58.) N. Havers, P. Burba, J. Lambert, and D. Klockow, Spectroscopic spec·tro·scope  
n.
An instrument for producing and observing spectra.



spectro·scop
 characterization of humic-like substances in airborne particulate matter, J. Atmos. Chem. 29, 45-54 (1998).

(59.) A. Gelencser, A. Hoffer, Z. Krivacsy, G. Kiss, A. Molnar, and E. Meszaros, On the possible origin of humic hu·mic  
adj.
Of, relating to, or derived from humus.

Adj. 1. humic - of or relating to or derived from humus; "humic acid"
 matter in fine continental aerosol, J. Geophys. Res. (submitted) 2001.

About the authors: L. A. Currie (intercomparison organizer) is an NIST Fellow Emeritus in the Chemical Science and Technology Laboratory (CSTL CSTL Chemical Science and Technology Laboratory
CSTL Clinical Study Team Leader
); B. A. Benner, Jr., D. B. Klinedinst, G. A. Klouda, and S. A. Wise are scientists in CSTL; J. D. Kessler was a scientist in CSTL, and is now a graduate student at the University of California, Irvine; J. V. Marolf and J. F. Slater were Guest Researchers in CSTL, Slater is now a graduate student at the University of New Hampshire New Hampshire, one of the New England states of the NE United States. It is bordered by Massachusetts (S), Vermont, with the Connecticut R. forming the boundary (W), the Canadian province of Quebec (NW), and Maine and a short strip of the Atlantic Ocean (E). , Durham, New Hampshire Durham is a town in Strafford County, New Hampshire, USA. The population was 12,664 at the 2000 census. Durham is home to the University of New Hampshire. History ; H. Cachier is a scientist at Centre des Science du Climat et de l'Environment, Gif sur Yvette, France; R. Gary is President of Sunset Laboratories, Inc., Forest Grove, Oregon Forest Grove is a city in Washington County, Oregon, United States, 25 miles west of Portland.

Pacific University has been the most distinctive aspect of the town throughout its history. Originally a small farm town, it is now primarily a bedroom suburb of Portland.
; J. C. Chow and J. Watson are scientists at the Desert Research Institute, Reno, Nevada; E. R. M. Druffel is a Professor at the University of California, Irvine, California Irvine is an incorporated city in Orange County, California, United States. It is a planned city, mainly developed by the Irvine Company since the 1960s. Formally incorporated on December 28 1971, the 69.7 square mile (180.5 km²) city has a population of 202,079 (as of 2007). ; C. A. Masiello was a graduate student at the University of California, Irvine, California, and is now a scientist at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, Cali fornia; T. I. Eglinton and C. M. Reddy are scientists at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, Massachusetts Woods Hole is a census-designated place and village within the town of Falmouth in Barnstable County, Massachusetts, at the extreme southwest corner of Cape Cod, near Martha's Vineyard and the Elizabeth Islands. ; A. Pearson was an MIT MIT - Massachusetts Institute of Technology  graduate student at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, and is now a Professor at Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts This article is about the city of Cambridge in Massachusetts. For the English university town, see Cambridge, England. For other places, see Cambridge (disambiguation).
Cambridge, Massachusetts is a city in the Greater Boston area of Massachusetts, United States.
; O. Gustafsson is a Professor at Stockholm University Stockholm University (Stockholms universitet) is a state university in Stockholm, Sweden. It has about 37,000 students studying at four faculties. History

In 1878, the university college Stockholm högskola
, Stockholm, Sweden; J. G. Quinn is a Professor at the University of Rhode Island History
The University was first chartered as the state's agricultural school in 1888. The site of the school was originally the Oliver Watson Farm, and the original farmhouse still lies on the campus today.
, Narragansett, Rhode Island Narragansett is a town in Washington County, Rhode Island, United States. The population was 16,361 at the 2000 census. The nickname for the town is 'Gansett.

For geographic and demographic information on the village of Narragansett Pier, which is part of Narragansett, see
; P. C. Hartmann was a graduate student at the University of Rhode Island, Narragansett, Rhode Island, and is now a postdoctoral post·doc·tor·al   also post·doc·tor·ate
adj.
Of, relating to, or engaged in academic study beyond the level of a doctoral degree.

Noun 1.
 fellow at EAWAG EAWAG Eigenössische Anstalt für Wasserversorgung, Abwasserreinigung und Gewässerschutz (Swiss Federal Institute for Environmental Science and Technology / ETH) , Duebendorf Switzerland; J. I. Hedges is a Professor at the University of Washington, Seattle, Washington This page is protected from moves until disputes have been resolved on the .
The reason for its protection is listed on the protection policy page.
; K M. Prentice was a student at the University of Washington, Seattle, Washington; T. W Kirchstetter is a scientist at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, scientific research centers run by the Univ. of California, located in Berkeley, Calif., and Livermore, Calif., respectively. , Berkeley, California Berkeley is a city on the east shore of San Francisco Bay in Northern California, in the United States. Its neighbors to the south are the cities of Oakland and Emeryville. To the north is the city of Albany and the unincorporated community of Kensington. ; T. Novakov is a scientist emeritus at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California; H. Puxbaum is a Prof essor at the Vienna University of Technology As of 2005, Vienna University of Technology is ranked no. 9th of the world's 100 top technology universities by the Times Higher Education Supplement, which corresponds to the 8th rank of all European technology universities in that survey. , Vienna, Austria; H. Schmid is a graduate student at the Vienna University of Technology, Vienna, Austria. The National Institute of Standards and Technology is an agency of the Technology Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce.
COPYRIGHT 2002 National Institute of Standards and Technology
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Schmid, H.
Publication:Journal of Research of the National Institute of Standards and Technology
Article Type:Statistical Data Included
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:May 1, 2002
Words:16274
Previous Article:Through measurement to knowledge: the inaugural lecture of Heike Kamerlingh Onnes (1882).
Next Article:Effect of loading rate upon conventional ceramic microindentation hardness.
Topics:



Related Articles
Oxygen upheaval: the crashing of continents may have shaped the atmosphere. (Cover Story)
Statistics and measurements.
NIST releases air particulate on filter media standard reference material (SRM). (Standard Reference Materials).(Brief Article)
NIST produces two new wavelength calibration standards for the wavelength division multiplexing L-band. (Standard Reference Materials).(Brief Article)
NIST standards for microanalysis and the certification process.
Isotope reference standards developed. (General Developments).(Brief Article)
Chemical analysis of World Trade Center fine particulate matter for use in toxicologic assessment. (World Trade Center: mini-monograph).
NIST develops a Standard Reference Material for peanut butter.(Standard Reference Materials)
The remarkable metrological history of radiocarbon dating [II].
Sample characterization of automobile and forklift diesel exhaust particles and comparative pulmonary toxicity in mice.(Research / Article)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles