TY - JOUR AU - 김기현 DA - 2015/11 PY - 2015 UR - https://www.nature.com/articles/srep16383 UR - http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11754/29159 AB - An analytical technique was developed for the quantitation of volatile organic compounds (VOC) in three different forms of electronic cigarette (EC): solution, vapor, and aerosol. Through the application of the mass change tracking (MCT) approach, the consumed amount of the solution was measured to track the conversion of targets between the different phases. The concentration of aerosol plus vapor (AV) decreased exponentially (559 to 129 g m(-3)) with increasing puff velocity (0.05 to 1 L min(-1)). A strong correlation existed between sampling volume and consumed solution mass (R-2 = 0.9972 +/- 0.0021 (n = 4)). In the EC solution, acetic acid was considerably high (25.8 mu g mL(-1)), along with trace quantities of some VOCs (methyl ethyl ketone, toluene, propionic acid, and i-butyric acid: 0.24 +/- 0.15 mu g mL(-1) (n = 4)). In the aerosol samples, many VOCs (n-butyraldehyde, n-butyl acetate, benzene, xylene, styrene, n-valeric acid, and n-hexanoic acid) were newly produced (138 +/- 250 mu g m(-3)). In general, the solution-to-aerosol (S/A) conversion was significant: e.g., 1,540% for i-butyric acid. The emission rates of all targets computed based on their mass in aerosol/consumed solution (ng mL(-1)) were from 30.1 (p-xylene) to 398 (methyl ethyl ketone), while those of carboxyls were much higher from 166 (acetic acid) to 5,850 (i-butyric acid). PB - NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP KW - VOLATILE ORGANIC-COMPOUNDS KW - ENVIRONMENTAL TOBACCO-SMOKE KW - GAS-CHROMATOGRAPHY KW - MASS-SPECTROMETRY KW - PHASE KW - STANDARD KW - LIQUID KW - AIR KW - CARTRIDGES KW - NICOTINE TI - A novel method to quantify the emission and conversion of VOCs in the smoking of electronic cigarettes IS - 16383 VL - 5 DO - 10.1038/srep16383 T2 - SCIENTIFIC REPORTS ER -