There is presently no instrumentation that can provide (near) real time information on elemental composition of atmospheric aerosols. We describe an arrangement where air is sampled through a cyclone @30 L/min with a 50% cutoff @ ~250 nm. The particles deposit into a cup through which deionized water is continuously flowing. High purity HNO3 is added downstream and the mixed stream optionally flows through a quartz photo reactor (185 nm, ~90 °C, tR ~1.2 min) and is aspirated by an induction coupled plasma mass spectrometer (ICP-MS). Comparative batch experiments in which samples were not photodigested at all or thermally digested off-line for an extended period indicated no statistically significant difference in the results. This observation agrees with early theoretical and experimental work. Some 22 elements were quantifiable (S/N > 10) at all times in the aerosol samples collected in our highly urban sampling location; an additional 4 elements were quantifiable at times of construction activity in the general area. Presently attained system limits of detection (LODs) are orders of magnitude higher than the instrumental LOD, both because of the purity of the acid and pump-induced contamination. These aspects can be vastly improved and will need to be improved to determine background concentrations. © 2017 Elsevier B.V.