The partitioning of seven polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) to four model atmospheric particulate materials (APM) in dry nitrogen is examined. Literature data involving the development of a photoelectric aerosol sensor for the quantitation of particulate PAHs are reanalysed in an atmospheric gas-particle partitioning context. The PAHs include chrysene and benz[a]anthracene, three benzofluoranthenes, benzo[a]pyrene, and benzo[e]pyrene. The model sorbents include graphitic carbon, sodium chloride, silica, and alumina. The measured partition coefficients are expressed in both a K(p) (m3-mu-g-1) and a K(p,s) (m3 m-2) format, and are compared to corresponding values for urban particulate material (UPM) at ambient relative humidity (r.h). The partition coefficient K(p) is the ratio of the sorbed concentration (ng-mu-g-1) to the gaseous concentration (ng m-3). The partition coefficient K(p,s) is the ratio of the surface-area normalized sorbed concentration (ng m-2) to the gaseous concentration (ng m-3). Estimates of the compound-dependent heats of desorption from the surfaces (Q1, kJ mol-1) are determined from the slopes of plots of measured values of log K(p) (or log K(p,s)) vs 1/T. For graphitic carbon, a surface that might have been expected to sorb compounds in a non-specific manner, the agreement between the measured log K(p,s) vs 1/T lines and extrapolated UPM lines is very reasonable. The agreement was not as good for the other three sorbents. Silica and alumina exhibited significantly stronger sorption than UPM on a K(p,s) basis. However, the Q1 estimates determined for silica and alumina were not found to be as high as might have been expected under these circumstances; the quality of the Q1 data is therefore in question. The general agreement between the log K(p,s) vs 1/T plots for graphitic carbon in dry nitrogen with those for UPM at ambient r.h. adds further evidence to the argument that partitioning to UPM is adsorptive, and non-specific in nature.