Articoli

Oxidant Canister Cleaning in Preparation for Sampling and Analyzing Airborne Ethylene Oxide and Other VOCs

23 Jun 2025

Authors: Jason S. Herrington, Jason Hoisington, Brian Jones
Restek Corporation

Published By: ACS Omega

Year of Publication: 2025

Link: https://doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.5c02687

Abstract: Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) such as ethylene oxide (EtO) grow with time in the blank levels of canisters used to sample, store, and analyze said compounds despite cleaning with the current state-of-the-art methods. This problem has existed for the air measurement and monitoring community since the inception of air sampling with canisters in the early 1980s. It has been postulated that this growth is due to the oxidative degradation of canister residues containing higher-molecular-weight compounds and/or particulate matter (PM). The current manuscript describes the use of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) for the effective removal of EtO, other VOCs, and/or their presumed precursors while leaving inert residuals. Results demonstrate that 10 heavily contaminated canisters, subjected to a 7 day zero-air verification, had EtO concentrations averaging 7.50 ppbv and 47 pptv for traditional and proposed oxidant cleaning methods, respectively. Results also demonstrate that 19 of 20 lightly contaminated canisters with EtO concentrations above 20 pptv, despite traditional cleaning, had been reduced to nondetectable levels with the recommended oxidant canister cleaning approach. In addition, these 19 canisters passed a 7 day known-standard verification of 150 pptv to confirm that there were no biases associated with the proposed oxidant cleaning method. The heavily and lightly contaminated canisters were evaluated for cleanliness and recoveries using U.S. EPA Method TO-15 and Draft Method 327, respectively. The oxidant cleaning method, results, discussion, and opportunities for future work are addressed in the current manuscript.

Authors

  • Jason Herrington, PhD

    Jason joined Restek in 2011 after spending over 10 years in environmental analysis, most notably as a postdoctoral research fellow with the U.S. EPA focusing on the development of techniques for organic speciation of ambient gas-phase and particulate air toxics. He has a BS in environmental sciences from Rutgers University and a PhD in exposure science from The University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey. His wide-ranging work has been published in over a dozen peer-reviewed manuscripts and presented around the world. As a senior scientist with Restek, Jason is heavily involved with developing new air products and applications.

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  • Jason Hoisington

    Jason Hoisington received his bachelor’s degree in general science with a focus on chemistry from the University of Alaska, Fairbanks. He worked for SGS Environmental for seven years in environmental soil and water testing, developing methods for the analysis of volatiles and semivolatile organics to include pesticides and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). In 2012, Jason moved on to lab and application support for Dow Chemical Company, providing advanced analytical troubleshooting and method development. In 2019, Jason joined Restek and has focused on air applications.

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  • Brian Jones
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