Pham YL, Holz O, Beauchamp J (2023)
Publication Type: Journal article
Publication year: 2023
Book Volume: 17
Article Number: 037102
Journal Issue: 3
The first and most crucial step in breath research is adequate sampling, which plays a pivotal role in quality assurance of breath datasets. In particular, the emissions or uptake of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) by sampling interface materials present a risk of disrupting breath gas samples. This study investigated emissions and uptake by three interface components, namely a silicon facemask, a reusable 3D-printed mouthpiece adapter, and a pulmonary function test filter compatible with the commercial Respiration Collector for In-Vitro Analysis (ReCIVA) breath sampling device. Emissions were examined before and after (hydro-)thermal treatment of the components, and uptake was assessed by exposing each material to 12 representative breath VOCs comprising alcohols, aldehydes, ketones, carboxylic acids, terpenes, sulphurous and nitrogenous compounds at different target concentration ranges (∼10 ppb
APA:
Pham, Y.L., Holz, O., & Beauchamp, J. (2023). Emissions and uptake of volatiles by sampling components in breath analysis. Journal of Breath Research, 17(3). https://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1752-7163/acce34
MLA:
Pham, Y. Lan, Olaf Holz, and Jonathan Beauchamp. "Emissions and uptake of volatiles by sampling components in breath analysis." Journal of Breath Research 17.3 (2023).
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