Author:
Röhler Laura,Schlabach Martin,Haglund Peter,Breivik Knut,Kallenborn Roland,Bohlin-Nizzetto Pernilla
Abstract
Abstract. The Norwegian Arctic possesses a unique environment for
the detection of new potential chemicals of emerging Arctic concern (CEACs)
due to remoteness, sparse population and the low number of local
contamination sources. Hence, a contaminant present in Arctic air is still
considered a priority indication for its environmental stability and
environmental mobility. Today, legacy persistent organic pollutants (POPs)
and related conventional environmental pollutants are already well-studied
because of their identification as Arctic pollutants in the 1980s. Many of them
are implemented and reported in various national and international
monitoring activities including the Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme
(AMAP). These standard monitoring schemes, however, are based on compound-specific quantitative analytical methods. Under such conditions, the
possibility for the identification of hitherto unidentified contaminants is
limited and random at best. Today, new and advanced technological
developments allow a broader, unspecific analytical approach as either
targeted multicomponent analysis or suspect and non-target screening
strategies. In order to facilitate such a wide range of compounds, a
wide-scope sample clean-up method for high-volume air samples based on a
combination of adsorbents was applied, followed by comprehensive
two-dimensional gas chromatography separation and low-resolution
time-of-flight mass spectrometric detection (GC × GC-LRMS). During
the study reported here, simultaneous non-target and suspect screening were
applied. The detection of over 700 compounds of interest in the particle
phase and over 1200 compounds in the gaseous phase is reported. Of those, 62 compounds were confirmed with reference standards and 90 compounds with a
probable structure (based upon mass spectrometric interpretation and library
spectrum comparison). These included compounds already detected in Arctic
matrices and compounds not detected previously (see also
Fig. 1). In addition, 241 compounds were assigned
a tentative structure or compound class. Hitherto unknown halogenated
compounds, which are not listed in the mass spectral libraries used, were
also detected and partly identified.
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