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      Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in soils: Sources, behavior, and indication significance (a review)

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      Eurasian Soil Science
      Pleiades Publishing Ltd

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          Measurement of emissions from air pollution sources. 3. C1-C29 organic compounds from fireplace combustion of wood.

          Organic compound emission rates for volatile organic compounds (VOC), gas-phase semivolatile organic compounds, and particle-phase organic compounds are measured from residential fireplace combustion of wood. Firewood from a conifer tree (pine) and from two deciduous trees (oak and eucalyptus) is burned to determine organic compound emissions profiles for each wood type including the distribution of the alkanes, alkenes, aromatics, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH), phenol and substituted phenols, guaiacol and substituted guaiacol, syringol and substituted syringols, carbonyls, alkanoic acids, resin acids, and levoglucosan. Levoglucosan is the major constituent in the fine particulate emissions from all three wood types, contributing 18-30% of the fine particulate organic compound emissions. Guaiacol (2-methoxyphenol), and guaiacols with additional substituents at position 4 on the molecule, and resin acids are emitted in significant quantities from pine wood combustion. Syringol (2,6-dimethoxyphenol) and syringols with additional substituents at position 4 on the molecule are emitted in large amounts from oak and eucalyptus firewood combustion, but these compounds are not detected in the emissions from pine wood combustion. Syringol and most of the substituted syringols are found to be semivolatile compounds that are present in both the gas and particle phases, but two substituted syringols that have not been previously quantified in wood smoke emissions, propionylsyringol and butyrylsyringol, are found exclusively in the particle phase and can be used to help trace hardwood smoke particles in the atmosphere. Benzene, ethene, and acetylene are often used as tracers for motor vehicle exhaust in the urban atmosphere. The contribution of wood smoke to the ambient concentrations of benzene, ethene, and acetylene could lead to an overestimate of the contribution of motor vehicle tailpipe exhaust to atmospheric VOC concentrations.
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            A review of atmospheric polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons: Sources, fate and behavior

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              Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in the environment: homologous series in soils and recent marine sediments

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Eurasian Soil Science
                Eurasian Soil Sc.
                Pleiades Publishing Ltd
                1064-2293
                1556-195X
                July 2013
                July 13 2013
                July 2013
                : 46
                : 7
                : 728-741
                Article
                10.1134/S1064229313070090
                60ebd050-8bf6-4d8e-bd37-649fb9c7ad25
                © 2013
                History

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