The in situ detection of smoking in public area by laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy

The in situ detection of smoking in public area by laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy

Journal Pre-proof The in situ detection of smoking in public area by laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy Qihang Zhang, Yuzhu Liu, Wenyi Yin, Yihui Ya...

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Journal Pre-proof The in situ detection of smoking in public area by laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy Qihang Zhang, Yuzhu Liu, Wenyi Yin, Yihui Yan, Lei Li, Guanhua Xing PII:

S0045-6535(19)32423-3

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2019.125184

Reference:

CHEM 125184

To appear in:

ECSN

Received Date: 12 July 2019 Revised Date:

13 October 2019

Accepted Date: 19 October 2019

Please cite this article as: Zhang, Q., Liu, Y., Yin, W., Yan, Y., Li, L., Xing, G., The in situ detection of smoking in public area by laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy, Chemosphere (2019), doi: https:// doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2019.125184. This is a PDF file of an article that has undergone enhancements after acceptance, such as the addition of a cover page and metadata, and formatting for readability, but it is not yet the definitive version of record. This version will undergo additional copyediting, typesetting and review before it is published in its final form, but we are providing this version to give early visibility of the article. Please note that, during the production process, errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain. © 2019 Published by Elsevier Ltd.

1

The in situ Detection of Smoking in Public Area by

2

Laser-induced Breakdown Spectroscopy

3

Qihang Zhang a, Yuzhu Liua,b,*, Wenyi Yina, Yihui Yana, Lei Lic and Guanhua Xingd

4 5 , 7 8 9 10 11

a

Jiangsu Key Laboratory for Optoelectronic Detection of Atmosphere and Ocean, Nanjing University of Information Science & Technology, Nanjing 210044, P. R. China b

Jiangsu Collaborative Innovation Center on Atmospheric Environment and Equipment Technology (CICAEET), Nanjing 210044, P. R. China

c

Institute of Mass Spectrometer and Atmospheric Environment, Guangdong Provincial Engineering Research Center for On-line Source Apportionment System of Air Pollution, Jinan University, Guangzhou 510632, P.R. China d

China National Environmental Monitoring Center, Beijing 100012, P. R. China

12

Abstract: The cigarette smoke in public area could be harmful to the non-smokers. In this paper,

13

laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS) is applied to the in situ detection of the cigarette

14

smoke in public area, and the single particles aerosol mass spectrometer (SPAMS) is utilized to aid

15

the elemental analysis as well as realize the isotope detection. According to the obtained emission

1,

spectra, the smoke consists of Mg, Ca, Sr, Na, K elements which are absent in air, and the

17

concentrations of H2O and CO2 in smoke increase obviously. Moreover, the cigarette ash after

18

burning is taken as the sample for off-line detection and several heavy metal elements are detected.

19

The comparison between the spectra of cigarette smoke and ash shows that these two kinds of

20

detection are greatly different in terms of constituent and plasma status. In addition, the molecular

21

emission of Carbon-Nitrogen was observed in smoke spectrum, and the molecular vibrational and

22

rotational temperature of CN molecule was calculated. Finally, the LIBS and SPAMS were applied

23

to the semi-quantitative detection and isotope analysis of Pb in the smoke.

24

Keywords: Laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy, Single Particles Aerosol Mass Spectrometer,

25

in situ detection; smoke pollution; Pb

2, 27

1. Introduction

28

It is well-known that cigarette smoking is harmful for health due to the toxic ingredient of

29

cigarette. Moreover, the noxious smoke of the cigarette containing nicotine, tar, Pb, As and other

30

noxious ingredient also has pernicious effects on the non-smokers (Salvi et al.,2009). The research

31

also shows that the second-hand smoke could cause a wide range of adverse health effects,

32

including cancer, respiratory infections, heart attacks and other diseases (Glantz et al., 1991; Teo et

33

al., 2006; Öberg et al., 2011). Non-smokers exposed to second-hand smoke increase their heart

34

disease risk by 25–30% and their lung cancer risk by 20–30% (Barnoya et al., 2005).

*

Corresponding to author: Yuzhu Liu. E-mail: [email protected]

35

Accordingly, the smoking is strictly forbidden in most public area such as hospital, train

3,

station or office building all around the world with the purpose of eliminating such great damage

37

to the non-smokers. However, this significant prohibition is often ignored by some smokers, and

38

the smoke generated from their smoking could fill the whole of public area. Although the smoke

39

becomes thinner as time goes on, the damage still exists but the smell is no longer scented by the

40

non-smokers.

41

Therefore, it is of great significance to accurately evaluate the exposure to the cigarette

42

smoke of the people in the public area. While it is obviously not possible to adapt the method of

43

conventional chemical analysis because of their complicated procedure. Similarly, the present

44

optical methods such as atomic absorption spectrometry(AAS) (Dos Santos et al., 2017; Huang et

45

al., 2019), atomic fluorescence spectrometry(AFS) (Duan et al., 2017), and X-ray

4,

fluorescence(XRF) (Felix et al., 2018; Kapishnikov et al., 2017; Gama et al., 2017) also need

47

complex sample pretreatment or consume too much time. Therefore, it is not feasible to use these

48

methods for the in situ detection of smoking.

49

Laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy(LIBS) is an analytical method with many advantages

50

such as rapid and precise response, simultaneous multi-element analysis, high sensitivity (Viana et

51

al., 2019; Guo et al., 2017). Due to the merits above, it is widely applied to the component

52

analysis of coal, alloy and other inorganic substances (Rehan et al., 2018; Baudelet et al., 2010).

53

However, it could be troublesome to identify the spectral lines in LIBS spectrum when there exist

54

two or more possibilities. It is necessary to utilize other analytical method, such as mass spectrum,

55

to aid the analysis of LIBS. While the conventional mass spectrometer is not available to the in

5,

situ detection of cigarette smoke. Single particles aerosol mass spectrometer (SPAMS) has proven

57

to be a suitable method for the in situ component analysis in recent years (Li et al., 2016). It can be

58

applied to identify particle size and chemical composition from a single particle with extremely

59

high temporal and spatial resolution. Therefore, it could be an excellent choice to combine these

,0

two technique for the smoking detection.

,1

However, to our best knowledge, the in situ detection of the cigarette smoke by laser-induced

,2

breakdown spectroscopy combined with single particles aerosol mass spectrometer has never been

,3

addressed. In the present work, the LIBS and SPAMS were applied to the in situ detection of

,4

smoke in public area and the rapid evaluation of the exposure to cigarette smoke of the

,5

non-smokers.

,, ,7 ,8

2. Experimental section 2.1 LIBS setup

,9

The schematic diagram of the experimental setup is shown in Fig.1. The smoke is generated

70

from the burning cigarette. In order to realize the in situ detection, the laser pulse is directly

71

focused on the smoke, and the emission spectrum is obtained by the monitor(spectrometer). The

72

excitation laser employed in our work is a Q-switched Nd:YAG laser and it was operated at a

73

fundamental wavelength of 1064 nm; the energy is 260 mJ in a single laser pulse with a 6 ns

74

duration at a frequency of 10 Hz. The plasma radiation emission was directly collected by an

75

optical fiber coupled to a spectrometer with a spectral window ranging from 220 to 770 nm. The

7,

spectral resolution of the spectrometer is around 0.1 nm.

77 78 79

Fig.1 The schematic diagram of the experimental setup

2.2 SPAMS setup

80

The SPAMS setup has been introduced in detail in our previous paper (Li et al., 2011). The

81

single particles of the cigarette smoke in the size range of 0.1-2.0 µm were effectively drawn from

82

ambient atmosphere into the vacuum chamber, and then were gradually focused onto the axis of an

83

aerodynamic lens. The Nd:YAG laser (266 nm) employed as the excitation laser and the particles

84

were desorbed/ionized at the ion source region by the pulsed laser to get the mass spectrum, and

85

the energy of each pulse is approximately 520 µJ.

8, 87

3. Results and Discussion

88

3.1 The in situ elemental detection of smoke by LIBS

89

In order to simulate the detection in real environment condition, all the experiments in the

90

present work were operated in the air and the samples such as the cigarette smoke and ash were

91

detected by LIBS technique. Taking the cigarette smoke, ash as targets, the spectra of them were

92

obtained and analyzed, respectively.

93

The LIBS spectrum of cigarette smoke (labeled as Smoke On) were obtained and shown in

94

Fig.2. For comparison, the spectrum of the air without any cigarette smoke (labeled as Smoke Off)

95

was also put in the same figure. Before the analysis, to avoid the overlap of their spectral lines, the

9,

smoke spectrum was moved up in the direction of y-axis. The Fig.2 shows that the spectral lines in

97

the spectrum of cigarette smoke are much more than air spectrum. The observed spectral lines are

98

identified based on the NIST atomic spectra database and the results are marked in Fig.2

99

respectively. It can be found from the figure that the observed spectrum of the smoke consists of

100

the lines of C, Mg, Ca, Sr, Na, H, O, N, K, while only the lines of H, O, N elements can be

101

observed in the spectrum of air. In particular, the intensity of the Hα (656.28nm) line is much

102

lower than that in smoke’s spectrum, which can be explained by the lower concentration of H2O in

103

the air. Similarly, the C I (247.86nm) line in smoke’s spectrum is observed obviously while that in

104

air’s spectrum is too weak to be observed. Ca II 315.89nm Ca II 317.93nm 6000

4000

Smoke Off Smoke On

5000

3000

3000

2000

0

Mg II 279.55nm

-20

2000

2000

-40

Mg II 280.27nm

Sr II 407.77nm

-60

Sr I 421.55nm

-100

245 246 247 248 249 250

0

410

420

430

440

Hα 656.28nm

6000 2000

4000

O I 615.96nm

1000

Ca I 585.73nm

O I 715.67nm 2000

N I 746.831nm

Smoke Off Smoke On

1000

450

Wavelength/nm 6000

4000

K I 766.49nm K I 769.89nm

Na I 588.99nm Na I 589.59nm

Ca I 526.17nm Ca I 526.42nm Ca I 527.03nm

Ca I 559.01nm Ca I 559.45nm Ca I 559.85nm Ca I 560.13nm

3000

400

3000

Smoke Off Smoke On

Intensity/arb.units

340

N I 742.364nm N I 744.23nm

320

N I 665.28nm

300

Wavelength/nm

N I 672.48nm

280

N I 648.47nm

260

4000

2000

0 0

0 240

0 0

105 10, 107 108 109

500

1000

1000

Mg I 285.21nm

-80

1000

2000

C I 247.86nm

2000

Intensity/arb.units

3000

Ca I 422.67nm

4000

CaI: 428.30nm CaI: 428.94nm CaI: 429.90nm CaI: 430.25nm CaI: 430.77nm CaI: 431.87nm

Intensity/arb.units

4000

Intensity/arb.units

Smoke Off Smoke On

Ca I 442.54nm Ca I 445.59nm Ca I 443.49nm

6000

0 0

520

540

560

580

Wavelength/nm

600

600

620

640

660

680

700

720

740

760

780

Wavelength/nm

Fig.2 The LIBS spectra of air and cigarette smoke. (a)240-340nm, (b)400nm-450nm, (c)500nm-600nm, (d)600nm-780nm (left y-axis for smoke off, right y-axis for smoke on)

3.2 The spectra of cigarette smoke and ash

110

In this part, the cigarette ash after burning is taken as the sample for off-line detection by

111

LIBS technique in order to reveal the difference between the present detection with the off-line

112

detection. The spectra of smoke and ash ranged from 240nm to 780nm were shown as Fig.3. The

113

two spectra were merged in order to analyze the respective contents of cigarette smoke and ash as

114

well as the difference between them. The observed spectral lines in the spectra were also identified

115

according to the NIST database and the line information was added into the figure.

10000

2000

Mg I 285.21nm

4000

CN ∆ν=0

0 240

260

280

300

320

340

360

380

400

420

440

460

480

460

480

500

Ca I 487.81nm

Ca I 442.54nm Ca I 443.49nm Ca I 445.59nm

Ca I 422.67nm

Sr I 421.55nm

Sr II 407.77nm

Ca II 315.89nm Ca II 317.93nm

Ca II 393.37nm Ca II 396.85nm

2000

Mg I 382.94nm Mg I 383.23nm Mg I 383.83nm

Mg II 279.55nm

4000

Ca I 363.08nm Ca I 364.44nm

Ash

Ba I 493.41nm

6000

Mg II 280.27nm Mg I 285.21nm

Intensity/arb.units

Mg II 279.55nm Mg II 280.27nm

C I 247.86nm

6000

Ca II 393.37nm Ca II 396.85nm

Ca II 370.60nm Ca II 373.69nm

Ca II 315.89nm Ca II 317.93nm

Ca I 422.67nm

Smoke 8000

0 240

11,

260

280

300

320

340

360

380

400

420

440

500

8000 H 656.28nm

Smoke

α

N I 672.48nm

2000

N I 665.28nm

Ca I 559.01nm Ca I 559.45nm Ca I 559.85nm Ca I 560.13nm

4000

O I 715.37nm

0 740

760

K I 766.49nm K I 769.89nm

Ca I 672.08nm

720

Ca I 714.81nm

700

K I 693.88nm

680

K I 691.10nm

Ca I 647.17nm

660

Li I 670.77nm Ca I 671.77nm

2000

640 Ca I 646.26nm

Mg I 516.73nm Mg I 517.27nm Mg I 518.36nm

4000

620 Ca I 612.22nm

Ca II 645.69nm

Ca I 559.01nm Ca I 559.45nm Ca I 559.85nm Ca I 560.13nm

Ash 6000

600

Ca I 644.98nm

580

Ca I 643.91nm

560

Ca I 616.22nm Ca I 616.95nm

540

Ca I 610.27nm

520

Ca I 585.73nm Na I 588.99nm Na I 589.59nm

500 8000

Ca I:534.94nm

Intensity/arb.units

Ca I 585.73nm Na I 588.99nm Na I 589.59nm

6000

N I 742.36nm N I 744.23nm N I 746.83nm

Wavelength/nm

Ca I 732.39nm

0

117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 12, 127 128 129 130 131 132 133

500

520

540

560

580

600

620

640

660

680

700

720

740

760

Wavelength/nm

Fig.3 The LIBS spectra of cigarette smoke and ash.

By comparing these two spectra, it was found that the spectral lines of Ca, Na, K and Mg were observed in both smoke’s spectrum and ash’s spectrum, indicating that these elements exist in smoke and ash, while the difference between these two spectra is significant. For instance, the C I (247.86nm), O I(715.37nm) and Hα (656.28nm) lines are completely invisible in ash’s spectrum, while these lines have high intensity in smoke’s spectrum. The burning of the cigarette makes C and H elements in the organics transfer to CO2, H2O, and they escape together with the smoke. Hence, there exists no C and H elements in the cigarette ash and their spectral lines are invisible in the spectrum. On the contrary, the spectral lines of several metal elements, such as Ba(493.41nm), Li(670.77nm), can only be observed in the spectrum of ash. Hence, there exists great difference between the constituents of cigarette smoke and ash. In addition, the comparison of the spectra above shows that, apart from the difference between the constituents of smoke and ash, there appears an interesting relationship between the intensities of ionic lines and atomic lines. Taking the spectral lines of Ca for instance, the atomic lines and ionic lines of Ca in the region from 365nm to 450nm are shown in Fig.4. It can be seen that the intensities of ionic lines (370.60nm, 373.69nm) in smoke are much higher than the

134 135 13,

intensities of Ca II lines in ash’s spectrum. Conversely, it is completely opposite in the case of atomic lines, the intensities of Ca I lines (430.25nm, 442.54nm, 443.49nm, 445.59nm, etc.) is far lower than those lines in ash’s spectrum. Similarly, the relationship between atomic lines and ionic

137

lines of Mg are the same as that of Ca as shown in Appendix(Fig.A.1). 6000

Smoke Ca I 428.30nm Ca I 428.94nm Ca I 429.90nm Ca I 430.25nm Ca I 430.77nm Ca I 431.87nm

Ca II 373.69nm

4000

Ca I 443.49nm Ca I 442.54nm Ca I 445.59nm

0 365

370

375

425

430

435

440

445

450

6000

Ash Ca I 428.30nm Ca I 428.94nm Ca I 429.90nm Ca I 430.25nm Ca I 430.77nm Ca I 431.87nm

Intensity/arb.units

Ca II 370.60nm

2000

4000

2000

Ca I 445.59nm Ca I 443.49nm Ca I 442.54nm

Ca II 370.60nm Ca II 373.69nm

0 365

138

370

375

425

430

435

440

445

450

Wavelength/nm

139

Fig.4 The atomic lines and ionic lines of Ca in the region from 365nm to 450nm

140 141 142 143 144 145 14, 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 15, 157 158 159

In consideration of the different matrix of these two samples, the matrix effect could be the primary cause accounting for this phenomenon. The matrix effect is of great significance to the LIBS detection and severely influences the accuracy of LIBS technique. It refers to the nonlinear laser-substance interaction in the process of laser ablation due to the difference in physical and chemical structure of the substance, which could lead to different spectral signals (Hahn et al., 2012). In this work, to be specific, the density of smoke is far lower than ash, which may cause higher temperature in smoke plasma. The extremely high temperature in the process of laser-matter interaction would make the atom ionize. The higher the plasma temperature is, the more likely the atoms are to ionize. Therefore, the intensity of ionic lines becomes higher with the increase of plasma temperature, while the intensity of atomic lines gets lower. To sum up the analysis and results, the on-line detection of smoke is quite different with the off-line detection of ash. 3.3 Molecular analysis of LIBS The LIBS technique is capable of elemental analysis as well as molecule analysis. In the present work, the LIBS technique was applied to the analysis of Carbon-Nitrogen free radical system. CN radical plays an important role in the combustion of carbides. In the outer layer of the plasma, the temperature is lower than the center, the molecular species could be direct released from the sample and combine with the molecular species in ambient atmosphere (Amiri et al., 2018). The formation of CN molecule can be elucidated by the reaction of carbon with atmospheric nitrogen (Kushwaha et al., 2008). In the most of cases, the CN emission band results

1,0 1,1 1,2 1,3 1,4 1,5 1,, 1,7 1,8 1,9 170 171 172 173 174 175 17, 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184

from the recombination of C2 molecules released from aromatic rings and N2 molecules from air (St-Onge et al., 2002), where the C2 molecules being formed by recombination of carbon atoms and ions. However, as is shown in Fig.3, the C2 emission band (usually about 516.5nm) and the ionic lines of C element (usually about 426.7nm) are all absent in the spectrum of smoke. Therefore, the recombination of C2 molecules and N2 molecules could not be the explanation for the formation of CN molecules in this case, and there exists the other pathways. According to the literature (Lucena et al., 2011), it is likely that the CN molecules result from the direct reaction of C atoms from carbon dioxide or organic molecules and N atoms from air in the plasma. Hence, it is deduced that the CN emission band is intimately related to the organic constituent such as nicotine and benzopyrene in the smoke, and the analysis of CN radical is promising to be an effective method to detect the combustion of carbides in the air. The CN molecule emission band were observed in the spectrum of cigarette and shown in Fig.5. In order to accurately identify these lines, the CN molecule emission in air was simulated on LIFBASE, and the simulated emission band was also shown together with the experimental result. In addition, the CN emission band population distribution was shown in Appendix (Fig.A.2). The simulated result indicates that the emission band ranged from 375nm to 389nm generated by the B-X transition. And the intensities of the lines generated by the transition of the vibrational levels, which are distributed on the right of the band, are higher than those lines generated by the transition of the rotation levels. Hence, only the vibrational lines could be obviously distinguished, and the transition levels were identified and marked according to the simulated emission band. In addition, temperature is an important thermodynamic parameters and significant for studying the transitions of molecules and their chemical reactions. Hence, in this part, the vibrational temperature and rotational temperature are fitted on LIFBASE, and the result shows the vibrational and rotational temperatures are approximately 8000K and 7700K, respectively. 800

400

0-0 700

4-4 5-5 3-3

500

2-2

200

400

0

300 200

Intensity/arb.units

Intensity/arb.units

1-1

Exp Sim

600

-200

100 0

185 18, 187 188 189 190

376

378

380

382

384

386

388

-400 390

Wavelength/nm

Fig.5 The experimental and simulated emission band of CN

3.4 semi-quantitative detection and isotope analysis of Pb in smoke The experiment and analysis above preliminarily validate it achievable to qualitatively detect the ingredient of cigarette smoke in situ with LIBS method. However, the quantitative analysis of the toxic ingredient in smoke is essential as well as meaningful. In this part, we focused on Pb

191 192 193 194 195 19, 197 198 199 200 201

element due to its great damage on environment and human health. The cigarette samples to be measured were prepared by soaking them in the ሺ‫ܪܥ‬ଷ COOሻଶ Pb ∙ 3‫ܪ‬ଶ ܱ solution of different concentrations. The experiments were operated as before after the cigarettes were completely dried in the drying cabinet, and the spectra of these samples were obtained. Before the comparison, we normalized the spectra data by the intensity of the Ca II (396.85nm), which is close to the Pb I (405.78nm) line. Fig.6 shows the spectra in the region from 395nm to 450nm. As can be seen from the figure, there exists no signal of Pb I line when the Pb concentration equals to 0. While with the increase of the Pb concentration, the Pb I(405.78nm) appears and its intensity grows gradually. Therefore, it is deduced that the LIBS method in this work is promising to realize the quantitative analysis of Pb or other toxic ingredients in cigarette smoke in situ. Ca II 396.85nm

2.0 % 1.0 % 0.1 % 0.0 %

Pb I 405.78nm

Intensity/arb.units

Ca I 422.67nm

202 203 204 205 20, 207 208 209 210 211 212

400

410

420

430

440

450

Wavelength/nm

Fig.6 The variations of the spectral lines with the different concentration of Pb What’s more, as is well-known, there exist four isotopes (m/z=204,206,207,208) of Pb element. While it is impossible to detect the isotope of the single atom by LIBS technique. Hence, in order to analyze these isotopes of Pb, the smoke was also in situ detected by using a self-design Single Particles Aerosol Time of Flight Mass Spectrometer. The mass spectrometry can not only verify the result of the element analysis by LIBS, which is helpful for the identification of spectral lines, but also detect the abundance of the Pb in smoke samples. The mass spectrum of the isotope of Pb was shown as Fig.7. It is evident that the isotopes of Pb(206Pb+,207Pb+,208Pb+) can be obviously observed in the mass spectrum while the 204Pb cannot be observed for its low abundance in nature.

300

250

(53±4%)

200

208

+

Intensity/mV

Pb

150

(25±3%) 206

100

+ ±3%) Pb (22 207 + Pb

50

0 200

213 214 215 21, 217 218 219

201

202

203

204

205

206

207

208

209

210

M/Z

Fig.7 The mass spectrum of Pb isotope and abundance in the smoke Then the abundances of these three isotopes were calculated according to the intensities of peaks, and it shows that the abundance of Pb in smoke is similar to that in nature. However, it is well known that the isotopes obtained from different sources is likely to have different isotope ratios (Bol′shakov et al., 2015). Therefore, it can be deduced that the sources of the heavy mental elements can be determined according to the isotope abundance by using SPAMS.

220 221

Conclusion

222

In the present work, the LIBS was applied to the in situ detection of the cigarette smoke and

223

ash, and the SPAMS was used to aid the elemental analysis and realize the isotope detection of Pb

224

element. Based on the identification of the smoke spectrum, it can be found that the smoke from

225

burning consists of Ca, Na, Sr, K elements, which are nonexistent in the air. And the comparison

22,

with the air spectrum shows that the concentrations of the CO2 and H2O are much higher than

227

those in the air. In addition, the cigarette ash after burning is taken as the sample for off-line

228

detection, and then the ash spectrum is compared with smoke. It shows that there exists great

229

difference between the constituents of smoke and ash. The smoke spectrum contains spectral lines

230

of C, O, H elements while no Ba, Li lines exists, which can only be observed in the spectrum of

231

ash. Besides, the matrix effect of LIBS was also discussed by comparing the atomic lines and

232

ionic lines of Ca and Mg in cigarette smoke and ash. It shows that intensity of ionic line could be

233

higher in smoke than that in ash and the intensity of atomic lines could become lower because of

234

the high plasma temperature. Therefore, the results of on-line detection of smoke and off-line

235

detection of ash are greatly different. Moreover, the emission band of CN molecule in the region

23,

from 375nm to 389nm only appears in smoke spectrum, which is likely to generate from the direct

237

reaction of C atoms from carbon dioxide or organic molecules and N atoms from air in the plasma.

238

By simulated its emission band in LIFBASE, this band was identified and the vibrational and

239

rotational temperatures in our experiments are approximately 8000K and 7700K, respectively.

240

Then the Pb element in smoke was semi-quantitatively detected and the results shows that the with

241

the increase of the Pb concentration, the intensity of Pb I(405.78nm) grows gradually. Finally, the

242

Pb isotopes (206Pb,207Pb,

243

isotope was calculated. It is expected that LIBS combined with the SPAMS is promising to realize

244

the quantitative detection and source analysis of the toxic constituents in cigarette smoke in situ.

208

Pb) were in situ detected by the SPAMS, and the abundance of Pb

245 24,

Funding

247

National Key R&D Program of China (Grant No. 2017YFC0212700).

248 249

Acknowledgments

250

We would like to thank Miss Yuchen Hu for assisting in drawing Figure 1.

251 252

References

253

Salvi, S.S., Barnes, P.J., 2009. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in non-smokers. Lancet. 374:733-43

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1.The first study of the in situ detection of smoking in public area by LIBS and SPAMS. 2.The smoking was firstly detected by both on-line and off-line optical methods. 3.The CN band for cigarette was firstly studied by combining theory and experiment. 4.The self-designed SPAMS was applied to the isotope abundance analysis.

Dear editor, All the authors agree to submit this manuscript entitled “The in situ Detection of Smoking in Public Area by Laser-induced Breakdown Spectroscopy” to Chemosphere. All the authors declare that there is no conflict of interest. And I signed in the name of all the following authors for the agreement.

Qihang Zhang a, Yuzhu Liua,b,1, Wenyi Yina, Yihui Yana, Lei Lic and Guanhua Xingd a

Jiangsu Key Laboratory for Optoelectronic Detection of Atmosphere and Ocean, Nanjing University of

Information Science & Technology, Nanjing 210044, P. R. China b

Jiangsu Collaborative Innovation Center on Atmospheric Environment and Equipment Technology

(CICAEET), Nanjing 210044, P. R. China c

Institute of Mass Spectrometer and Atmospheric Environment, Guangdong Provincial Engineering Research

Center for On-line Source Apportionment System of Air Pollution, Jinan University, Guangzhou 510632, P.R. China d

China National Environmental Monitoring Center, Beijing 100012, P. R. China

Corresponding author’s signiture: Yuzhu Liu

1

Corresponding to author: Yuzhu Liu. E-mail: [email protected]