A continuous monitoring method and system wherein a porous substrate or film
is
used. The air from the environment is drawn through a region of the porous substrate
by a simple air pump and the substances in the air are deposited or chemically
adsorbed onto the surface of the substrate. The region of the substrate where the
environmental air is drawn through is continuously monitored by an optical or spectrometric
method. The substrate is in the form of a tape supplied by a feed reel in a reel-to-reel
cartridge and taken up by a take-up reel as found in a film cartridge or a magnetic
tape cartridge. The cartridge can be replaceable. A variety of materials may be
employed as the substrate with an adequate surface area to effect accumulation
of solid, liquid, aerosol, or gas phase compounds. An optical interrogation system
is engineered such that the surface of the tape at the point where air from the
environment is drawn through the substrate becomes the interaction region between
the source output and the sample. As material from the environment accumulates
in this region, the interaction of the source with the material is monitored by
a suitable detector and supporting circuitry.