Automated, continuous monitoring of organic vapors in air under three field designs for plume drift was demonstrated using a hand-held ion mobility spectrometer (IMS) in characterizing IMS behavior as a point sensor. In one field study, the IMS was placed 50cm from a 9m2grass plot contaminated with methylsalicylate and response to airborne vapors was recorded during a 13hr period of atmospheric turbulence to illustrate susceptibility of point sensors to wind direction. A similar study under near-quiescent atmospheric conditions was made using dimethylsulfoxide. In a third study, the plume from a point source of dipropyleneglycolmonomethylether was interrogated over a 25m #xD7; 12m grid downwind with windspeeds of 6#x2013;18km h#x2212;. Laboratory studies were used to measure instrumental response times and influences from potentially interfering atmospheric organic pollutants.
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