Distribution of Light Hydrocarbons in Ambient Air

Abstract
The diversity of hydrocarbons which are present in ambient polluted air provide a potentially rich source of information concerning the nature of this type of pollution. Measurements of the relative amounts of various hydrocarbons can be correlated with the various possible sources. Since hydrocarbon reactivities vary widely it is also possible to estimate the extent to which various individual hydrocarbons have reacted. Except for samples taken deliberately near sources of hydrocarbon pollution these air samples invariably resemble auto exhaust with an addition of natural gas and of C3–C5 paraffins which resemble gasoline vapor. Samples taken in industrial areas and near the smoke plume from a brush fire showed distinctive differences in composition. During the smog season in the fall of 1968 good data were obtained of “typical” or “representative” samples of light, medium and heavy smog. These show the expected depletion of more reactive hydrocarbons in a much more convincing way than before. By comparing these distributions with composition in unreacted samples and by making use of data from bottle irradiations, it was possible to estimate the contribution of the various hydrocarbons in terms of “amount reacted.” The amounts of higher hydrocarbons present and reacted were also estimated from gasoline composition.