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Characterization of Natural and Affected Environments
Time-Resolved Measurements of Indoor Chemical Emissions, Deposition, and Reactions in a University Art Museum Demetrios Pagonis, Derek Price, Lucas B. Algrim, Douglas A. Day, Anne Handschy, Harald Stark, Shelly Lynn Miller, Joost A. de Gouw, Jose L. Jimenez, and Paul J. Ziemann Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.9b00276 • Publication Date (Web): 16 Apr 2019 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on April 22, 2019
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Environmental Science & Technology
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Time-Resolved Measurements of Indoor Chemical Emissions, Deposition, and
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Reactions in a University Art Museum
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Demetrios Pagonis1,2, Derek J. Price1,2, Lucas B. Algrim1,2, Douglas A. Day1,2, Anne V.
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Handschy1,2, Harald Stark1,2,3, Shelly L. Miller4, Joost de Gouw1,2, Jose L. Jimenez1,2,
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and Paul J. Ziemann1,2*
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1
17
Boulder, Colorado 80309
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2
Department of Chemistry, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado 80309
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3
Aerodyne Research, Inc., Billerica, Massachusetts 01821
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4
Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado 80309
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*
Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES), University of Colorado,
Corresponding email:
[email protected] 1 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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ABSTRACT
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A six-week study was conducted at the University of Colorado Art Museum during
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which volatile organic compounds (VOCs), CO2, O3, NO, NO2, other trace gases, and submicron
25
aerosol were measured continuously. These measurements were then analyzed using a box
26
model to quantify the rates of major processes that transformed the composition of the air. VOC
27
emission factors were quantified for museum occupants and their activities. Deposition of VOCs
28
to surfaces was quantified across a range of VOC saturation vapor concentrations (C*) and
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Henry’s law constants (H) and was determined to be a major sink for VOCs with C* < 108 µg m-
30
3
31
quantified, with unsaturated and saturated VOCs having oxidation lifetimes of >5 and >15 h,
32
making deposition to surfaces and ventilation the dominant VOC sinks in the museum. Ozone
33
loss rates were quantified inside a museum gallery, where reactions with surfaces, NO,
34
occupants, and NO2 accounted for 62%, 31%, 5%, and 2% of the O3 sink. The measured
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concentrations of acetic acid, formic acid, NO2, O3, particulate matter, SO2, and total VOCs were
36
below the guidelines for museums.
and H > 102 M atm-1. Reaction rates of VOCs with O3, OH radicals, and NO3 radicals were
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Environmental Science & Technology
INTRODUCTION
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Measurements of indoor pollutants in art museums have been central in the development
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of the field of indoor chemistry (Weschler, 2011). Motivated by a need to understand the effect
40
of air pollutants on art conservation, these measurements and accompanying models describe
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fundamental aspects of how outdoor pollutants deposit and react indoors, with the results being
42
applicable to indoor environments in general (Druzik et al. 1990; Nazaroff et al. 1990; Salmon et
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al. 1990; Nazaroff and Cass, 1991; Brimblecombe et al. 1999; Camuffo et al. 1999; Gysels et al.
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2004). Sampling periods for trace gas measurements in these studies, determined by techniques
45
available at the time, ranged from 1–24 hours, limiting the ability of researchers to study
46
processes that occur on timescales of minutes. Recent studies using techniques with faster time
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response have allowed for new insights into how pollutants are emitted, transported, and
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transformed through chemical reactions indoors. Measurements of volatile organic compounds
49
(VOCs) in university classrooms using proton transfer reaction-mass spectrometry (PTR-MS)
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have allowed for quantitative source attribution of VOC emissions to occupants, ventilation, and
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surfaces (Liu et al. 2016), and determination of emission rates by occupants for a wide variety of
52
VOCs (Tang et al. 2016). Use of high-resolution, time-of-flight chemical ionization mass
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spectrometers (CIMS) have allowed for novel source attributions of nearly 100 carboxylic acids
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(Liu et al. 2017) and of chlorinated emissions following application of cleaning products
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containing bleach (Wong et al. 2017). These studies consistently documented a significant
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contribution of humans to indoor VOC concentrations, with human influence readily also
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detectable in an open-air soccer stadium and a movie theater (Veres et al. 2013; Williams et al.
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2016).
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Even with these advances, significant questions remain surrounding the variability of
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emission profiles across different indoor environments with different occupancy rates,
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construction materials, and activities. Additionally, broader changes in emissions (McDonald et
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al. 2018) indicate that in many cities volatile chemical products (VCPs) are emerging as a
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dominant source of anthropogenic VOCs outdoors. These emissions include personal care
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products, cleaning supplies, paints, and other compounds that are often emitted indoors, and so
65
characterizing their indoor emissions is necessary to improve understanding of both indoor and
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outdoor air quality.
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Depending on their volatility, VOCs (and semivolatile and intermediate volatility species
68
(Robinson et al. 2007)) can partition to surfaces and particulate matter (Bennett and Furtaw Jr.,
69
2004; Weschler and Nazaroff, 2017), undergo gas-phase or heterogeneous reactions with
70
oxidants such as O3 and OH radicals (Weschler and Carslaw, 2018), and be transported outdoors
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through heating, ventilation and air-conditioning (HVAC) systems as well as by infiltration and
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open windows and doors. Partitioning to indoor surfaces is an aspect of VOC fate that is being
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actively researched. Models of impermeable indoor surfaces describe the formation of organic
74
films on those surfaces by compounds with sufficiently small octanol-air partitioning coefficients
75
(Weschler and Nazaroff, 2017). The contribution of permeable indoor surfaces such as paints
76
and plastics to partitioning has received less attention though these surfaces have the potential to
77
be significant sinks (Won et al. 2001). Additionally, water-soluble compounds are expected to be
78
absorbed into surface water films (Duncan et al. 2017).
79
In this study we present results from six weeks of indoor measurements at a university art
80
museum. We present emission rates from occupants that are consistent with previous literature,
81
emission rates of VCPs emitted from painting and other occupant activities, the volatility
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dependence of VOC deposition to indoor surfaces, and the oxidation lifetimes of VOCs inside
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the museum. This work provides a comprehensive description of how indoor pollutants are
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emitted, transported, deposited, and chemically transformed in a single indoor setting, and the
85
results will be particularly useful for improving models of the chemistry of indoor environments.
86 87 88
EXPERIMENTAL SECTION Art Museum Site. The art museum study of indoor chemistry (ARTISTIC) campaign
89
was conducted from April 13th to May 23rd, 2017 at the University of Colorado Art Museum
90
(40.0072 deg. lat. -105.2701 deg. lon. 1,650 m above mean sea level). The museum volume is
91
~6,000 m3 and air is circulated by an HVAC system at a constant volume flow rate of 48,000 m3
92
hr-1, with 4,800 m3 hr-1 of outside air mixed in. The temperature and relative humidity (RH) are
93
tightly controlled at 21 ± 1˚C and 45 ± 2%. From April 13th to May 9th we sampled from one of
94
the museum’s galleries (“the gallery” hereinafter, 780 m3, constant ventilation at 7,800 m3 hr-1)
95
that was exhibiting art created by the University’s students, and from May 9th to May 23rd
96
measurements were conducted in the collections room (1,400 m3, constant ventilation at 8,200
97
m3 hr -1), where the museum permanent collections are stored.
98
Measurements and Instrumentation. VOCs were measured using a quadrupole proton
99
transfer reaction-mass spectrometer (PTR-MS) (de Gouw and Warneke, 2007), and more highly
100
oxygenated compounds were measured using a high-resolution time-of-flight chemical
101
ionization mass spectrometer that was operated using iodide (I-CIMS) or nitrate (NO3-CIMS) as
102
reagent ions by swapping ion sources (Bertram et al. 2011, Jokinen et al. 2012). Calibration
103
procedures for each instrument are described in detail in the SI. Carbon dioxide, carbon
104
monoxide, methane, and water were measured using a Picarro G2401 cavity ringdown
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spectrometer. Ozone, nitrogen oxides (NOx), and sulfur dioxide (SO2) were measured with
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Thermo analyzers (49i O3, 42i-TL, and 43i-TLE, respectively). Sub-micron size aerosol size
107
distributions and mass concentration were measured with a TSI scanning mobility particle sizer
108
(SMPS, differential mobility analyzer model no. 3080; condensation particle counter model no.
109
3776, 15-600 nm size range). Relative humidity and temperature were measured with a Vaisala
110
RH probe, model no. HMP75B. Zero air was generated on-site using a Thermo 1160 zero air
111
generator. UV-Vis spectral irradiances were measured using an Ocean Optics USB 2000+
112
spectrometer and used to calculate species photolysis rates as described in the Supporting
113
Information (SI). Trace gases were sampled through 0.47 cm inner diameter (ID) FEP Teflon
114
tubing and aerosols were sampled through 0.47 cm ID copper tubing. The NO3-CIMS sampled
115
through a 1.5 cm ID stainless steel tube 0.7 m in length.
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In the gallery and collections rooms the instruments sampled air from inside each room
117
and from the supply air from the HVAC system. The supply air was sampled after all
118
conditioning had occurred, with the sampling lines located immediately (< 30 cm) upstream of
119
the diffusers where the supply air enters either room. The instruments sampled using an
120
automated valve system that alternated sampling between room air and supply air every 5 min,
121
with makeup flows applied so that air was always being pulled with constant flow rate through
122
both sampling lines. The valve timing was chosen to balance the ability to sample both locations
123
as frequently as possible against the delays in response times of the instruments and sampling
124
lines to VOCs (Pagonis et al. 2017).
125
Art Museum Model. A box model that is equivalent to a two-compartment completely-
126
mixed flow reactor (CMFR) model (Shair and Heitner, 1974) was used to quantify emissions,
127
deposition, and reaction rates of chemicals inside the museum, as depicted in Figure 1. The
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assumption of complete mixing of the indoor air is based on a mass balance applied to VOCs
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within two museum compartments: the gallery and the supply air + rest of the museum. For
130
consistency with the discussion of measurements we refer to the two compartments as the gallery
131
and the supply air, since these correspond to the two air sampling locations. The measured
132
supply air concentration mostly represents the rest of the museum (including ducts) as it consists
133
of 74% recirculated air from the rest of the museum, 16% recirculated gallery air, and 10%
134
outside air. Exchange between the gallery and the supply air, and the supply air and outside air
135
were determined from the ventilation rates given above, assuming both compartments are well
136
mixed. The model was numerically integrated using the Euler method at a time step of 0.36 s.
137
Shorter time steps did not affect the model outputs.
138
The differential equations describing the change in concentration for a compound in the
139
gallery and in the supply air due to transport, chemistry, emission, and deposition are given in
140
Equations 1 and 2: ![!]!
141 142
!"
![!]! !"
= 𝐴𝐸𝑅!,! ([𝐴]! − 𝐴 ! ) +
!! ! !!
+ 𝑅! (𝑡) + 𝑃! (𝑡)
= 𝐴𝐸𝑅!,! ([𝐴]! − 𝐴 ! ) + 𝐴𝐸𝑅! ([𝐴]! − 𝐴 ! )
!! !!
+
!! ! !!
+ 𝑅! (𝑡) + 𝑃! (𝑡)
(1) (2)
143
where the subscripts g, s, and o refer to the gallery, the supply air + rest of the museum, and
144
outdoors. Those subscripts are then applied to the following terms in Equations 1 and 2: [A] is
145
the concentration of compound A (µg m-3), AER is the air exchange rate between the respective
146
compartments in the model (h-1), V is volume (m3), E(t) is the emission rate at time t (µg h-1), R(t)
147
is the rate of chemical production minus loss (µg m-3 h-1), and P(t) is the rate of surface emission
148
minus surface deposition (µg m-3 h-1). A complete list of equation terms and their units is
149
presented in Table S1.
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Indoor emission rates. Emissions of VOCs inside the gallery from people during an art
151
exhibit opening, from paint when a wall was painted, and other less well-defined instances where
152
the VOC concentration in the gallery was higher than in the supply air were quantified by
153
assuming that the VOC underwent no chemistry inside the gallery (Rg(t) = 0) and did not
154
partition to surfaces (Pg(t) = 0), in order to solve directly for the emission rate Eg(t). Rearranging
155
Equation 1 we obtain Equation 3 for the emission rate of a compound inside the gallery (Tang et
156
al. 2015): 𝐸! (𝑡) = 𝑉! 𝐴𝐸𝑅!,! [𝐴]! − [𝐴]! +
157
![!]!
(3)
!"
158
Emissions that occurred inside the museum but outside the gallery were quantified similarly
159
using Equation 4:
160
𝐸! (𝑡) = 𝑉! 𝐴𝐸𝑅!,!
𝐴!− 𝐴
!
+ 𝐴𝐸𝑅!,!
𝐴!− 𝐴
!
𝑉𝑔 𝑉𝑠
+
!!! !"
(4)
161
Outdoor air concentrations during the integrated period were assumed to remain constant at the
162
levels measured in the supply air immediately before the start of an emission event (Veres et al.
163
2013). As seen in Figure 2, the significant enhancements in indoor VOC concentrations above
164
background concentrations during an emission event reduce error caused by any variation in
165
outdoor concentration on calculated indoor emission rates.
166
Gas-surface partitioning rates. Partitioning of VOCs to museum surfaces was modeled
167
by analogy to reversible gas-particle partitioning in the atmosphere (Pankow, 1994; Donahue et
168
al. 2006) using Equation 5:
169
𝑃! 𝑡 = 𝑘!"#$$ [𝐴]! − 𝑘!"# [𝐴]!
(5)
170
where kdep and kemiss are the first-order rate constants for surface deposition and surface emission
171
(h-1), and [A]w is the concentration of VOC sorbed to surfaces in the supply air + rest of the 8 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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museum (µg m-3 air). Because partitioning rates can only be estimated when partitioning
173
equilibrium is disturbed, we estimate kdep and kemiss in the supply air + rest of the museum during
174
periods when in-gallery emission rates have been quantified according to Equation 3. We then
175
configure the model so that gas-surface partitioning and transport are the only sinks for the VOC
176
in the supply air + rest of the museum (Rs(t) = 0). Our model estimates of low O3, NO3, and OH
177
concentrations in the gallery support the assumption that the impact of reactions on most
178
compounds is minor. The rate of change in the concentration of the VOC in the supply air is then
179
given by Equation 6: !!
180
![!]!
181
Values of kdep and kemiss were determined by varying the value of both rate constants
!"
= 𝐴𝐸𝑅!,! ([𝐴]! − 𝐴 ! ) + 𝐴𝐸𝑅!,! ([𝐴]! − 𝐴 ! )
!!
+
!! (!) !!
+𝑘!"#$$ 𝐴
!
− 𝑘!"# 𝐴
!
(6)
182
systematically to find the minimum squared error between model output of supply air and gallery
183
concentrations evaluated against the measured concentrations of the VOC during the emission
184
event. When estimating deposition rates for VOCs emitted by museum occupants during the
185
exhibit opening, Es(t) was calculated using Eg(t) and the occupancies of the gallery and rest of
186
the museum (Es(t) = Eg(t) × Occs / Occg). For all other gallery emission events Es(t) was assumed
187
to be zero. Additional details of how the model was initialized are presented in the SI.
188
For our discussion of the results we chose to present VOC deposition rates in terms of the
189
fraction of VOC that is recirculated (and thus not deposited) during each pass through the
190
museum and its HVAC system, Frecirc, instead of kdep. This quantity more clearly represents the
191
measurable range of VOC deposition behavior in the museum, since (as discussed in SI and
192
shown in Figure S1) compounds with Frecirc ≈ 0 have large, highly variable kdep values even
193
though they are almost entirely removed. The fraction of VOC that is recirculated during time t
194
is given by Equation 7:
195
𝐹!"#$!# = 𝑒 !!!"# !
(7) 9
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Substituting the time required for a single pass of 0.125 h, calculated from the ratio of the total
197
museum volume (6,000 m3) and the total HVAC volume flow rate (48,000 m3 h–1) then gives
198
Equation 8:
199 200
𝐹!"#$!# = 𝑒 !!.!"# !!"#
(8)
Chemical reaction rates. The model was configured to account for reactions of O3, NO,
201
NO2, and VOCs inside the gallery. To avoid making assumptions about the outdoor
202
concentrations of these reactive compounds, we use the model to predict concentrations inside
203
the gallery only, rather than inside the entire museum. To achieve this, we constrain [A]s of the
204
above species in the model using their measured supply air concentrations. The chemical
205
reactions included in the model and corresponding rate constants are presented in Table S2. Rate
206
constants for VOC reactions are those of limonene (Ziemann and Atkinson, 2012), and all other
207
rate constants were taken from the 2015 JPL Kinetics Evaluation (Burkholder et al. 2015).
208
Limonene was chosen as the VOC surrogate because it is abundant indoors and reacts rapidly
209
with O3 (with a high OH radical yield), NO3 radicals, and OH radicals, thus maximizing the
210
potential role of oxidation in the modeled fate of VOCs in the museum. Reaction of O3 with
211
surfaces inside the gallery was modeled using a constant deposition velocity, and reaction of O3
212
with people was modeled as a constant deposition velocity that scales with the number of people
213
inside the room, with occupancy estimated from CO2 measurements. The O3 deposition
214
velocities were varied to find values that gave a minimum summed squared error when model
215
predictions of gallery O3, NO, and NO2 concentrations were evaluated against their respective
216
measured gallery concentrations. Calculations based on measurements of photon fluxes inside
217
the gallery gave upper limits of photolysis rates of NO2 and NO3 of 4.6 × 10-7 and 1.2 × 10-4 s-1.
218
These photolysis reactions were included in the model but were too slow to affect model outputs.
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From the model outputs of O3 and NOx concentrations we also estimated the net
220
production rate of NO3 and OH radicals inside the gallery. Since NO3 radical photolysis is very
221
slow inside the gallery it is not significant and the dominant loss pathways for NO3 radicals were
222
reaction with NO, NO2, and VOCs. Typical sources of indoor OH radicals are photolysis of
223
precursors like HONO (Gligorovski, 2016) and ozonolysis of alkenes (Waring and Wells, 2015).
224
We assumed an OH radical yield of 0.5 from alkene ozonolysis (Ziemann and Atkinson, 2012),
225
and that the only OH radical loss processes are reactions with VOCs and NO2. In order to assess
226
the possible contributions of HONO to OH radical production we introduced an elevated
227
background concentration of HONO to the model and ran the model under conditions that would
228
maximize OH radical production from HONO photolysis and minimize OH radical production
229
from ozonolysis: 1 ppb alkenes (half the average measured concentration of isoprene plus
230
monoterpenes in the museum), 10 ppb HONO (twice the concentration previously measured in
231
an art museum, Katsanos et al. 1999), and a calculated upper limit for the HONO photolysis rate
232
(jHONO) of 6 × 10-8 s-1. Under these conditions, ozonolysis of alkenes remains the dominant
233
source (>95%) of OH radicals, indicating that because of low light intensities in this museum
234
HONO photolysis is not a significant contributor to OH radical production.
235 236 237
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION VOC Emission Rates. On April 28th an exhibit opening was held for the thesis
238
exhibition of the University’s Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) program from 5:00 to 7:00 PM local
239
time. Measured time series of CO2 and two selected VOCs, acetone and lactic acid, are shown in
240
Figure 2. The time series for each species is determined by emissions, deposition, reactions,
241
transport, and indoor-outdoor air exchange. Although lactic acid, acetone, and CO2 are all co-
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emitted by gallery occupants during the opening, they show different time series as a result of
243
these processes. The CO2 mass emission rates in the museum (gallery and the rest of the
244
building) during the opening were calculated using Equations 3 and 4, the measured time series
245
of CO2 in the gallery and supply air (Figure 2a), the CO2 concentration in outdoor air (assumed
246
to be 400 ppb, the typical concentration in the museum during unoccupied periods), and the
247
building parameters. Using a CO2 emission factor of 21 g person-1 h-1 measured by Tang et al.
248
(2016) in order to facilitate our comparison with the VOC emission rates measured in that work,
249
we estimated that the average occupancies of the gallery and the rest of the building during the
250
opening were 108 and 68 people. Museum staff counted 300 total attendees at the opening,
251
indicating that the average attendee spent 70 min (120 min × 176/300) inside the museum.
252
VOC emission rates were calculated for the gallery during the opening using Equation 3,
253
the measured time series of VOCs in the gallery and supply air, and the building parameters. The
254
mass balance of Equation 3 is not affected by any variation in the outdoor concentration of
255
VOCs. Gallery emission rates of VOCs that correlated with the CO2 emission rate are listed in
256
Table S3, and were used to calculate average per-person VOC emission rates during the entire
257
opening. The results are shown in Figure 3, where they are compared to human emission factors
258
quantified by Tang et al. (2016) in a classroom. Most emission factors agree with the estimates
259
of Tang et al. (2016) within a factor of two, with the following exceptions: monoterpenes (m/z 81
260
and 137), ethanol (m/z 47), and products of reactions of O3 with skin oil, such as 6-methyl-5-
261
hepten-2-one (6-MHO, m/z 127 and 109) and 4-oxopentanal (4-OPA, m/z 101) (Wisthaler and
262
Weschler, 2010). The elevated ethanol emission rate during the exhibit opening compared to the
263
classroom is possibly due to alcohol consumption by attendees prior to the opening since no
264
alcohol was served at the opening. The ethanol emissions are equivalent to what one would
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expect if 18 people (~16% of gallery occupants) had a blood alcohol content of 0.03, about the
266
amount acquired by consuming one standard drink in the hour prior to the opening (Kypri et al.
267
2005, Wright et al. 1975). Measured emissions of acetaldehyde (m/z 45) were also elevated,
268
possibly because breath acetaldehyde concentrations also increase following alcohol
269
consumption (Wong et al. 1992; Smith et al. 2002), another indication that opening attendees
270
may have consumed alcohol prior to the opening. Lower observed emission rates of
271
monoterpenes were possibly due to reduced emissions from personal care products – either
272
because these products had worn off over the course of the day (Coggon et al. 2018) or because
273
less product was used per person. The lower emission rates of skin oil-O3 reaction products
274
measured in this study compared to Tang et al. (2016) are consistent with the lower O3
275
concentrations inside the museum during the opening (4.5 ppb) compared to the Berkeley
276
classroom (10–25 ppb, X. Tang, personal communication).
277
Molecular assignments of the detected m/z values were based on results of prior PTR-MS
278
studies, including high-resolution measurements of human emissions (Tang et al. 2016), analyses
279
of products of ozone-squalene reactions indoors (Wisthaler and Weschler, 2010), and studies
280
using gas chromatographic pre-separation (Warneke et al. 2003). Assignment of VOCs emitted
281
during the painting of the gallery was facilitated by collecting samples of the paint and primer
282
and analyzing their emissions in the laboratory using a high-resolution Vocus PTR-ToF-MS that
283
was briefly available (Krechmer et al. 2018) and allowed for determination of the molecular
284
formulas. For detected m/z values that arise from fragmentation (e.g., m/z 43, C2H3O+; m/z 57,
285
C3H9+) we do not assign a single compound, rather, we assign a broad compound class such as
286
carboxylic acids or alkanes (Yuan et al. 2017).
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On April 21st, museum staff re-painted a wall inside the gallery to prepare for an
288
upcoming exhibit. A single coat of primer and a single coat of white paint were applied to 12 m2
289
of wall, directly on top of the existing paint. A total of 13 g of VCPs were emitted in this event,
290
and emission factors and maximum concentrations for each measured VCP are presented in
291
Table S4. The compounds emitted in the painting event are consistent with several of the major
292
classes of VCPs described by McDonald et al. (2018), including alkanes, glycol ethers, and
293
acetone. As discussed below, deposition of these compounds to building surfaces prior to being
294
ventilated to outdoor air is a significant fate for VCPs emitted indoors and is a key parameter for
295
bridging VCP indoor emission measurements with fluxes into outdoor air and outdoor
296
measurements. Additional emission events quantified in the museum are presented in Table S5.
297
VOC Deposition Rates. Following emission of a compound inside the museum, the
298
compound is redistributed throughout the museum via the building’s HVAC system. As this
299
happens one expects the concentration of the compound to rise in the supply air. For many of the
300
emissions measured, however, the increase in supply air concentration was significantly lower
301
than that predicted by the model and the measured gallery emission rate, museum volume, and
302
air exchange rates. For example, the difference in recirculation behavior of lactic acid compared
303
to CO2 and acetone can clearly be seen in Figure 2. Although all three compounds were co-
304
emitted by museum occupants during the opening, the relative increase in lactic acid
305
concentration in the supply air compared to the gallery air was significantly less than that of CO2
306
and acetone. This result, and the observation that after the conclusion of the opening at 7:00 PM,
307
CO2 and acetone were removed from the museum at the rate of indoor-outdoor air exchange
308
while lactic acid was lost much faster, indicate a loss process for lactic acid that occurred
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309
between the time it was emitted in the gallery and when it re-entered the gallery via the supply
310
air. A range of loss rates was observed for other VOCs.
311
The fractions of VOCs recirculated during one pass through the HVAC system and
312
museum following emission in the gallery were calculated using Equation 8 and the modeled
313
deposition rate constants kdep. The results are shown in Figure 4. For reference, values of Frecirc of
314
0.1, 0.5, and 0.9 correspond to values of kdep of 18.4, 5.5, and 0.8 h–1. The fractions depend
315
inversely on C* values (Donahue et al. 2006) estimated using the SIMPOL.1 group contribution
316
method (Pankow and Asher, 2008) and proportionally on Henry’s law constants (H) estimated
317
using the GROMHE structure-activity relationship (Raventos-Duran et al. 2010). The observed
318
dependence on C* and H can be explained by losses that occur by reversible gas-surface
319
partitioning during recirculation, since irreversible losses would be independent of these
320
quantities. Thus, VOCs with low C* and high H have gas-surface partitioning constants that
321
favor deposition (Pankow, 1994; Bennett and Furtaw Jr., 2004) and lead to low recirculation
322
fractions. For compounds with C* < 108 µg m-3 or H > 100 M atm-1 deposition to surfaces was
323
found to be a significant sink, with deposition being competitive with removal by ventilation
324
with outdoor air (a 1.25 h ventilation timescale is equivalent to a recirculation fraction of 0.9).
325
From our measurements we are unable to determine the relative contributions of the HVAC
326
system and the rest of the museum to deposition losses – we can only quantify the total
327
deposition rates of VOCs in the museum after they are emitted inside the gallery. The modeled
328
emission rates due to reversible partitioning from the walls back to the gas phase are a significant
329
source of VOCs, sufficient to maintain concentrations of 0–5 ppb for the compounds in Figure 4.
330
Models have been developed previously to describe the partitioning of compounds to
331
organic and aqueous films that are thought to cover indoor surfaces (Bennett and Furtaw Jr.,
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332
2004). Necessary inputs include compound volatility and water solubility, and estimates of the
333
amount of organic material and water sorbed to surfaces, which determine the C* and H values
334
at which a gas-phase compound will significantly sorb. In Figure 4 we show the recirculation
335
fraction of VOCs as a function of both C* and H, but are unable to determine the relative
336
contributions from sorption to organic and aqueous films. This is because compound C* and H
337
values tend to show an inverse relationship (i.e., low-volatility compounds generally have high
338
Henry’s Law coefficients; Hodzic et al., 2014; Schwarzenbach et al. 2017); and since the
339
museum relative humidity is held constant we could not systematically explore the role of
340
surface water in gas-surface partitioning. Replicating this study in an environment where relative
341
humidity varies might allow one to uncouple the two effects and thus determine the extent to
342
which indoor deposition of VOCs is controlled by partitioning to organic or aqueous films.
343
We also note that during the emission events used to model deposition in the museum
344
(and for the majority of days in the study) the outdoor air temperature and absolute humidity
345
were below the target values for inside the museum, so the HVAC system was heating and
346
humidifying the air by mixing steam. We expect that when air is instead being cooled by the
347
HVAC system there is potential for increased VOC deposition, as the cooling coils present a cold
348
surface that would promote condensation of water and thus volatility- and solubility-driven
349
deposition.
350
Ozone Loss Rates. Measurements of O3, NOx, and CO2 in the gallery and the supply air
351
were used to quantify the total loss rate of O3 in the gallery and the relative loss rates to gallery
352
surfaces, people, and reactions with NO and NO2. Average depletion of O3 observed in the
353
gallery relative to the supply air was 0.7 ppb, a 10% reduction in the indoor O3 concentration. To
354
simulate this, the model depicted in Figure 1 was run with the reactions given in Table S2
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355
included and with the supply air concentration of O3, NO, and NO2 constrained to the measured
356
concentration for each compound. Ozone deposition velocities were then fitted as described
357
above to give the best agreement between the measured and modeled gallery concentrations of
358
O3, NO, and NO2. The estimated per-person deposition velocity calculated for the gallery is 0.38
359
cm s-1 person-1, which is consistent with the range of 0.40–0.62 cm s-1 reported in studies
360
conducted in well-controlled test rooms (Fadeyi et al. 2013; Wisthaler and Weschler 2010) and
361
in classrooms (Fischer et al. 2013). The O3 deposition velocity to surfaces of 0.021 cm s-1 is also
362
consistent with other measurements in indoor environments (Reiss et al. 2004).
363
Modeled loss rates of O3 due to reaction with surfaces, occupants, and NOx during two
364
days of the campaign are presented in Figure 5. Averaged over the three weeks of measurements
365
surfaces accounted for 62% of the O3 loss, NO for 31%, occupants for 5%, and NO2 for 2%.
366
Especially notable in Figure 5 is the temporal variability of the contributions of NO to O3 loss.
367
Depending on the NO concentration and gallery occupancy the O3 removal rate inside the gallery
368
varied in time by a factor of four. The NO concentrations in the museum supply air for the period
369
presented in Figure 5 varied from 0 to 4 ppb, with rapid variations likely due to emissions from
370
nearby traffic and/or pottery kilns in an adjacent building. These variations in NO concentration
371
drastically affected the O3 loss rate, reducing the amount of O3 available to react with other sinks
372
when NO concentrations were high. The opening for the BFA exhibit took place on April 28th,
373
and the high occupancy inside the gallery led to people being the dominant sink for O3 in the
374
gallery. Conversely, on Saturday April 29th museum occupancy and NO concentrations were low
375
(Figure 5), typical of weekends in our study, and surfaces were the dominant O3 sink. These
376
results show that the reactive loss of O3 indoors is highly variable in time, and an accurate
377
accounting of the fate of O3 in a particular indoor environment must account for the variability in
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378
occupancy and NOx. This behavior also has implications for indoor production of NO3 and OH
379
radicals, as discussed below.
380
VOC Oxidation Rates. The relative contributions of reactions with O3, OH radicals, and
381
NO3 radicals to VOC chemistry inside the gallery were evaluated using O3 measurements along
382
with model estimates of OH and NO3 radical concentrations. Because the primary source of OH
383
radicals inside the museum is alkene ozonolysis (due to the very low HONO photolysis rates
384
discussed above), a surrogate alkene was added to the model to react with O3 and generate OH
385
radicals. In order to estimate upper limits for the OH radical concentration and oxidation rates, it
386
was assumed that the surrogate alkene concentration was twice the average measured alkene
387
concentration (5 ppb) and that the O3 rate constant was that of limonene (2.1 × 10-16 cm3 molec-1
388
s-1) (Atkinson and Arey, 2003). The maximum measured concentration of O3 and modeled
389
concentrations of OH radicals and NO3 radicals in the museum were 2.4 × 1011 molecules cm-3
390
(12 ppb), 1.2 × 105 molecules cm-3 (5.9 ppq) and 2.0 × 106 molecules cm-3 (98 ppq). From these
391
concentrations and the known rate constants for reaction of limonene with each oxidant (Table
392
S2), the lifetime of the surrogate alkene with respect to reaction with O3, OH radicals, and NO3
393
radicals in the museum was estimated to be 5.5, 15, and 12 h. Since saturated VOCs react almost
394
exclusively with OH radicals, and their rate constants for reaction with OH radicals are usually
395
smaller than that for limonene (Atkinson and Arey, 2003), the lifetimes for most saturated VOCs
396
with respect to oxidation will be much greater than 15 hr. For example, the lifetime of octane
397
with respect to reaction with OH radicals inside the museum is 12 days. These timescales
398
indicate that VOC removal by ventilation (1.25 h) and deposition (< 1 h for compounds with C*
399
below 108 µg m-3) dominate over oxidation, especially for saturated VOCs and aromatics
400
because of their slow reactions with O3 and NO3 radicals.
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We note that use of a slower-reacting VOC, such as α-pinene (the rate constants for
402
reaction with O3 and OH radicals are factors of 2.5 and 3.1 smaller than those of limonene), can
403
affect the model predictions of OH radical concentrations. At low alkene concentrations (5 ppb), the lower α-pinene
406
OH reactivity leads to an increase in OH radical concentration. For the range of surrogate VOC
407
concentrations modeled here (1–5 ppb) the OH radical concentrations modeled using α-pinene
408
and limonene are within 15%, so the choice of surrogate VOC does not have a large impact on
409
the estimated oxidation lifetimes.
410
IMPLICATIONS FOR ART CONSERVATION
411
The measured concentrations of acetic acid, formic acid, HNO3, NO2, O3, particulate
412
matter, SO2, and total VOCs examined in this study were below the action limits for museums
413
published by the Getty Conservation Institute (Grzywacz, 2006) and the Canadian Conservation
414
Institute (Tetreault, 2003), indicating that the CU Art Museum has good indoor air quality for
415
storing and displaying the University’s collections. The low concentration of pollutants in the
416
museum is partially attributable to the high recirculation fraction imposed by the air handler. We
417
expect that lowering the recirculation fraction (increasing the outdoor air fraction) would
418
increase the concentration of pollutants such as O3 and particulate matter by increasing the rate at
419
which they are brought into the museum. A summary of the pollutant concentrations measured in
420
the museum and the respective standards is presented in Table S6. The measured illuminance in
421
the gallery (33 lx) meets the 100-year standard for museums (Tetreault, 2003). The model allows
422
for estimation of deposition rates of airborne pollutants to a given surface. Using the O3
423
deposition velocity of 0.021 cm s-1 determined above and the calculated surface area of the
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424
gallery (assuming that all artwork is flat) we estimate the deposition rate of O3 in the gallery to
425
be 150 µg m2 day-1. The maximum deposition rate of HNO3 is calculated to be 0.81 µg m2 day-1
426
using the maximum gallery HNO3 concentrations obtained from the model and a deposition
427
velocity of 0.87 cm s-1 measured previously in a museum (Salmon et al. 1990). The average
428
submicron aerosol mass in the gallery measured by the SMPS was 0.61 µg m-3. Using the mean
429
difference in submicron aerosol mass in the gallery and supply air (5 ng m-3 campaign average)
430
and Equation 1 we calculate the deposition rate of submicron particles in the gallery to be 1.3 µg
431
m2 day-1. This deposition rate is within the range of 0.22–2.8 µg m2 day-1 reported by Nazaroff et
432
al. (1990) for submicron particles in museums in Southern California. Our results describing
433
VOC gas-surface partitioning indicate that organic pollutants, including acetic acid and formic
434
acid, have significant reservoirs in museum surfaces that can act as sinks when VOCs are emitted
435
and sources when the gas-phase concentration is reduced. Although the same general classes of
436
materials (e.g., wood, glass, wallboard, concrete) and coatings (e.g., paint, varnish, wax) are
437
likely used in most museums, it is not yet known how much variability exists in the gas-surface
438
partitioning properties of different products. Additional research on the nature of gas-surface
439
partitioning indoors is therefore needed to better understand how to control organic pollutants in
440
museums. As the airborne concentrations of all the above-mentioned pollutants are below the
441
published standards for museums, these deposition rates are probably not of concern for art
442
preservation in the museum.
443
IMPLICATIONS FOR INDOOR AIR CHEMISTRY
444
The results of this study show that real-time measurements of VOCs and other trace gases
445
combined with modeling result in a wealth of qualitative and quantitative information about the
446
transport, emission, deposition, and transformation of chemicals in the indoor environment. In
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447
our case, modeling was greatly simplified by the museum’s constant volume flow ventilation
448
system. Many indoor environments do not have such consistent air exchange rates, and
449
accurately modeling transport within those environments requires significant effort to determine
450
the variability in air exchange rates over time. Emissions of volatile chemical products were
451
identified as a significant source of VOCs inside the museum, and often occurred in discrete
452
events. The variability in the compounds emitted in each event demonstrates a continued need
453
for real-time characterization of the composition and concentrations of chemical products used
454
indoors.
455
The observed effect of VOC vapor pressure and Henry’s law coefficient on deposition
456
indicates that VOC sorption to indoor surfaces is analogous to gas-particle partitioning in the
457
atmosphere, with the volatility threshold for deposition in the museum being increased by about
458
six orders of magnitude relative to that proposed for partitioning to impermeable surfaces
459
(Weschler and Nazaroff, 2008). This indicates that absorption of VOCs by permeable surfaces,
460
including paints and plastics, may play a significant role in VOC deposition indoors.
461
Deposition to surfaces and ventilation to outside air are the dominant removal processes
462
of VOCs indoors in our study, with some removal of alkenes by O3 and NO3 radical oxidation.
463
Calculations made using our estimates of indoor oxidant concentrations show that indoor VOC
464
oxidation is generally slower than indoor-outdoor air exchange rates and deposition, and in
465
environments without a photolytic OH source saturated VOCs have lifetimes of tens of hours,
466
rendering them nearly inert indoors. Rapid changes in the indoor O3 reaction rate caused by
467
variations in NO concentration demonstrate the importance of O3-NOx reactions in determining
468
the oxidation regime of indoor air for the small fraction of VOCs that react before being
469
ventilated or depositing to a surface.
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470
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
471
We thank the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation (Grant No. G-2016-7173) for funding this study. The
472
authors acknowledge Stephen Martonis, Pedro Caceres, and Sandra Firmin at the University of
473
Colorado Boulder Art Museum, and Patrick Lester of CU Facilities for supporting the use of the
474
museum sampling site.
475 476
SUPPORTING INFORMATION AVAILABLE
477
The online supporting information for this study includes a description of the instrument
478
calibration procedures employed, a description of how the model was initialized, a table of
479
variables and mathematical expressions used in the text, a table of chemical reactions included in
480
the model, tables of emission events, and a comparison of measured pollutant levels to published
481
standards. This information is available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org.
482 483
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FIGURES
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Figure 1. Schematic of the box model used to describe the transport, emission, deposition, and
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reaction of compounds in the University of Colorado Art Museum. The museum is represented
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by two compartments, the gallery and the supply air + rest of museum, corresponding to the two
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sampling locations of this study. Air in each compartment is assumed to be perfectly mixed.
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Figure 2. Time series of (A) carbon dioxide, (B) acetone, and (C) lactic acid concentration
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measured by Picarro, PTR-MS, and iodide-CIMS, respectively, during a museum exhibit
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opening.
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Figure 3. Human emission factors determined in this study and in Tang et al. (2016). The
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symbols are the detected m/z for each VOC measured with the PTR-MS (Table S3). Emission
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factors of all species quantified by Tang et al. are summed to a unit mass for comparison to the
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ARTISTIC quadrupole PTR-MS data.
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Figure 4. Fraction of organic compound recirculated per pass through the museum and HVAC
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system as a function of the compound (A) saturation vapor concentration and (B) Henry’s law
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constant calculated using SIMPOL (Pankow and Asher, 2008) and GROMHE (Raventos-Duran
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et al. 2010), respectively.
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Figure 5. Ozone loss rates in the museum gallery over a two-day period, apportioned between
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reactions with gallery surfaces, occupants, NO, and NO2.
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