1. Field of the Technology
The present technology is directed to the measurement of the number concentration of airborne particles, to the focusing particles while airborne and to the collection of airborne particles through growth by water condensation. Specifically, it relates to particles in the size range from a few nanometers to a few micrometers in diameter.
2. Description of Related Art
Most airborne particles are difficult to detect directly because they have diameters smaller than the wavelength of visible light. Often condensational growth is used to enlarge these particles to a size that can be detected optically, thereby providing a means to readily measure airborne particle number concentrations. Condensational enlargement is also used to enable the aerodynamic focusing or collection of particles for chemical or exposure analyses.
Ultrafine particles, with diameters in the nanometer to hundreds of nanometers, are not easily enlarged by condensation. In almost all cases these ultrafine particles must be in an environment of vapor supersaturation before they will start to grow by condensation. Vapor supersaturation means that the concentration is larger than the vapor equilibrium concentration over a flat surface. This enhanced amount of vapor is needed to overcome the particle surface energy associated with its curvature and surface tension.
Hering and Stolzenburg introduced a means to create a supersaturation of water vapor in a laminar flow (U.S. Pat. No. 6,712,881, Hering, S V; Stolzenburg, M R, “A method for particle size amplification by water condensation in a laminar, thermally diffusive flow”, Aerosol Science and Technology 39: 428-436, 2005). Previously, laminar flow condensation methods had used a slowly diffusing species such as butanol as the condensing fluid. The method of Hering and Stolzenburg explicitly accounts for the high molecular diffusivity of water vapor, and achieves growth by water condensation in a laminar flow using a single-stage, warm, wet-walled condenser.
A second laminar flow method for producing small particle growth by water condensation is the “diffusive mixing” approach described by Hering and Lewis (U.S. Pat. No. 7,736,421). This method surrounds the aerosol flow with a warmer, saturated sheath flow in a laminar manner. Once joined, heat and water vapor are exchanged between the two flows by diffusion. Water vapor diffuses into the colder aerosol flow at a slightly higher rate than it is warmed by the surrounding flow, creating a region of water vapor supersaturation within the aerosol flow.
Multiple embodiments of technology for laminar flow water condensation systems are disclosed. In one aspect, the use of narrower flow dimensions minimizes the effects of the sampled particle number concentration on the system performance. In a second aspect, a double stage condenser is presented which lowers the temperature and water vapor content of the exiting flow. This second aspect may implemented in combination with the narrower dimensions of the first aspect. In a third aspect, a different type of double-stage condenser design is presented for specialized applications requiring more uniform yet limited droplet growth, such as when droplets are used as absorbers for material in the vapor phase. In a fourth aspect a design is presented to allow for longer residence times for particle activation and growth at low supersaturation, as required for the testing of diesel exhaust particulate matter. Each of these embodiments have been identified through numerical modeling tools developed to describe the laminar flow condensation system. These embodiments are applicable to a variety of geometries including both tubular and parallel plate configurations.
a and 1b illustrate the laminar flow condensation methods of the prior art.
a illustrates a first embodiment of a condenser in accordance with the present technology.
b illustrates a second embodiment of a condenser in accordance with the present technology.
c illustrates a third embodiment of a condenser in accordance with the present technology.
d illustrates a fourth embodiment of a condenser in accordance with the present technology.
a is a plot of a temperature profile for the condenser designs of
b is a plot of a temperature profile for the condenser designs of
c is a plot of a temperature profile for the condenser designs of
d is a plot of a temperature profile for the condenser designs of
a is a plot showing saturation profiles of radial position relative to axial position within a cylindrical, single-stage condenser at a first particle concentration and various condenser diameters.
c is a plot showing saturation profiles of radial position relative to axial position within a cylindrical, single-stage condenser at the second particle concentration and a 9.5 mm diameter
a is a graph showing the calculated droplet sizes exiting a single-stage condenser at a first t condenser diameter.
b is a graph showing the calculated droplet sizes exiting a single-stage condenser at a second condenser diameter.
a is a graph for droplet diameter versus axial position showing the evolution of droplet diameter along the direction of the flow for the single-stage condenser for cylindrical geometry of varying dimensions.
b is a graph for droplet diameter versus axial position showing the evolution of droplet diameter along the direction of the flow for the single-stage condenser for parallel plate geometry of varying dimensions.
a is a graph showing the centerline saturation ratio, wall temperature and axial position showing droplet growth for various configurations of the two stage, initiator-equilibrator condenser configuration.
b is a graph of the droplet diameter versus the axial position comparing a single stage condenser to the present technology.
a compares the saturation ratio,
a-12c compare the droplet sizes obtained using the initiator-equilibrator configuration to that found with the single stage condenser over a range of particle concentration and tube diameters, where
a shows profiles of the Kelvin equivalent diameter and
a shows profiles of the Kelvin equivalent diameter and
a shows the dependence of the maximum saturation ratio achieved as a function of the Initiator length divided by the volumetric flow rate for a cylindrical configuration.
b shows the dependence of the maximum saturation ratio achieved as a function of the Initiator length divided by the volumetric flow rate for a parallel plate configuration.
a shows Kelvin equivalent profiles and
a shows the evolution of droplet size along the centerline and
Laminar flow water condensation technology is used to condense water onto ultrafine particles suspended in air or other gaseous medium, and to grow them by condensation to form droplets of a few micrometers in diameter. Particles of this size can then be analyzed using a variety of techniques.
A laminar flow water condensation system as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,712,881, is referred to herein as “differentially diffusive”. Generally it consists of a preconditioner followed by a condenser, both of which have wetted cylindrical walls, as illustrated in
The first commercially used embodiment of the differentially diffusive method of U.S. Pat. No. 6,712,881 used a single tube 230 mm in length, with an inner diameter of 9.5 mm, with an air flow rate of 1 L/min (Hering, S V; Stolzenburg, M R; Quant, F R; Oberreit D R., Keady, P B., A laminar-flow, water-based condensation particle counter (WCPC), Aerosol Science and Technology, 39: 659-672, 2005)). The entire tube was lined with a wetted wick. The first half was maintained at a temperature of about 20° C. and served as the preconditioner. The second half was heated to 60° C., and served as the condenser.
The laminar flow water condensation method described by U.S. Pat. No. 7,736,421 is referred to here as “diffusive mixing”. As shown in
In a unique aspect of the present technology the condenser design is advanced. The condenser is where the water vapor supersaturation is created to initiate condensational growth on particles in the submicrometer to nanometer size range, and it is where these particles are subsequently grown through condensation to form droplets several micrometers in diameter. The creation of a region of vapor supersaturation is inherently an nonequlibrium process that relies on the relative rates of heat and water vapor transport.
The first aspect of the technology disclosed herein shows that by using narrower dimensions in the condenser, either smaller diameter tubes or more closely spaced parallel plates, the performance can be improved over a wide range of particle concentrations. Specifically, reducing the tube diameter of the first system (
The second aspect of the technology presented replaces the original single-temperature zone condenser with a two-stage condenser consisting of a short warm “initiator” section followed by a longer colder “equilibrator” section, with wetted walls throughout. This is illustrated in
This technology is referred to as the “initiator-equilibrator” condenser. Its temperature profile is illustrated in
The third aspect of the technology replaces the relatively cold, wet walled equilibrator described above with a warm, dry-walled “evaporator”. This technology is illustrated in
A fourth aspect of the technology uses a short, warm wet-walled initiator, much as that described above, followed by a longer wet-walled section with a linear temperature ramp along its length. The walls are wetted throughout. This is illustrated in
The second, third and fourth aspects of the technology can be combined with the sizing of the condenser developed under the first aspect, to provide for uniform performance over a range of particle concentrations. These condenser designs can be used with either the differentially diffusive approach wherein the flow enters a warm, wet-walled condenser, or the diffusive mixing approach wherein a warm saturated sheath flow is introduced around the aerosol flow. All of these aspects are applicable to multiple geometries, including tubes or parallel plates, or to slightly converging tubes or parallel plates.
Performance of each of these configurations can be understood using a numerical model that accounts for the details of the droplet growth. This numerical model of laminar flow condensation systems includes the condensational heat release and vapor depletion associated with droplet formation, that allows wall temperatures to vary along the length of the flow, and accommodates either cylindrical tubes or parallel plate geometries.
In accordance with this numerical model the temperature (T) and water vapor concentration (c) are solutions to the stationary convection-diffusion equation,
v·∇T=α∇
2
T (Temperature)
v·∇c=D∇
2
c (Water vapor concentration)
where α is the thermal diffusivity of air, and D the molecular diffusivity of water vapor in air. In a cylindrically symmetric system, assuming the velocity v is solely in the z direction and has a fully-developed parabolic flow profile, the temperature equation becomes
where r and z are radial and axial coordinates, respectively, Ro is tube radius, and U is average flow velocity. For a parallel plate geometry, the equation becomes
where z is in the direction of the flow, x is perpendicular distance from the centerline and δ=2Xo, is the separation between the plates. The third dimension, the overall width of the plates, is assumed infinite. Fluid properties evaluated at a mean temperature are treated as constants over the domain.
Profiles of the water vapor concentration, c, are determined by the analogous equations with a replaced by molecular diffusivity D, and T replaced by concentration c. The saturation ratio S is defined as the ratio between the partial pressure of water vapor and the equilibrium water vapor pressure associated with the local temperature.
At the wetted surface, the boundary conditions (for the tube) are given by:
c(R0)=csat(Twick(z))
T(R0)=Twick(z)
where Twick is the temperature profile of the wetted surface (e.g., cold, transitioning to hot) and csat(Twick) is the water vapor concentration corresponding to a dew point of Twick (100% RH).
A quantity important to the activation of condensational growth is the Kelvin equivalent diameter. This is calculated at each point from the saturation ratio and temperature profiles and the properties of the condensing vapor. The Kelvin equivalent diameter is defined as:
where Mw, ρ and σs are the molecular weight, liquid density and surface tension of water, Rg is the universal gas constant, T is the absolute temperature, and S is the water vapor pressure saturation ratio. The Kelvin equivalent diameter corresponds to the diameter of a water droplet whose equilibrium vapor pressure is given by the saturation ratio S. For particles, the activation diameter also depends on particle chemistry. For particles composed of a material that is not wetted by the condensing vapor, the activation diameter will be larger than dK. For soluble particles, dissolution into the condensate on the particle surface lowers the equilibrium vapor pressure; and the critical diameter required for particle growth is smaller, as described by the Raoult term in the Köhler equation.
After the temperature and vapor concentration fields have been calculated, the droplet growth is evaluated by numerically integrating the growth rate along its trajectory. Although the droplet's size and environment are changing as it is carried through the condenser, that timescale is long compared to the time required for a droplet to equilibrate with its surroundings. Therefore, when calculating the growth rate of a droplet at some point along its trajectory, an approximation is used that its properties are in a steady state and that it exists alone in an infinite volume.
With the steady state assumptions the rate of change of the radius a of the droplet is given by
where c∞ is the water vapor concentration far from the droplet (which is simply the quantity c from the convection-diffusion equation) and cs is the concentration at the surface. The factor (c∞−cs)/a is the concentration gradient resulting from a spherically-symmetric diffusion process. The value of cs is determined by the saturation vapor pressure of water, taking into account the temperature at the droplet surface, Ts, and the Kelvin relation:
The Φ(a) term is a correction term to provide continuity between the free molecular and continuum regimes. The Fuchs-Sutugin correction method is used with the accommodation coefficient equal to one:
where the Knudsen number, Kn=λ/a, is the ratio of the mean free path to the particle radius. The mean free path is given by λ=3D/
The droplet temperature is handled with the same quasi-steady-state approach. Heat is added or lost via a thermal gradient term. Additionally, a concentration gradient, which implies growth, contributes condensational heat:
where kv is the thermal conductivity of the vapor phase, Hvap is the heat of vaporization of water and T∞ is the temperature far from the droplet—in other words, T from the convection-diffusion equation. These relations for droplet temperature and size are solved numerically by taking small steps forward in time along the stream line, with the assumptions of constant fluid properties and rapid temperature equilibration within the droplet.
Finally, the effects of high number concentrations are handled in an iterative fashion. After the droplet growth has been calculated, the depletion of the vapor and the condensational heat are added into the convection-diffusion equation. The growth and diffusion calculations are iterated to find a self-consistent result.
Our numeric solution was developed using Crank-Nicholson approach for the integration of the diffusion equations. The model was validated against the analytical, series solution of Stolzenburg and McMurry (M. Stolzenburg and P. McMurry, An ultrafine condensation nucleus counter, Aerosol Science and Technology 14: 48-65, 1991) in the limit of low particle concentrations, and constant wall temperatures.
Using the above modeling, one can provide design criteria for producing consistent saturation profiles over a wide range of sampled particle concentrations in a variety of laminar flow water condensation system configurations. With similar saturation profiles over a range in particle concentrations the shifts in the smallest detectable particle size are minimized, and the droplet growth is more consistent. Shown below, a single stage condenser is first examined, although the concepts developed also apply to the multi-stage condensers introduced here.
The first aspect of the technology is illustrated in
At very low particle concentrations the saturation profiles are independent of the tube diameter, and the profiles of
Residence time, and hence tube diameter, is important to consider in the droplet growth. As seen by comparing
a shows the droplet sizes for the narrow bore tube calculated by the model for concentrations of activated particles ranging from near-zero to 2×105/cm3.
Another consequence of the decreased saturation ratio at higher particle concentrations is an increase in the activation diameter. The activation size, which refers to the smallest particle that will be grown by condensation, depends on the difference in Gibbs free energy between the liquid and vapor, which in turn depends properties of the vapor (surface tension, saturation ratio and temperature) as well as properties of the particle (solubility, wetability). The Kelvin equivalent diameter, defined by equation (3) describes the minimum size of a water droplet that would be more likely to grow than to shrink, and characterizes much of the vapor properties important to activation. Each flow streamline has a characteristic minimum Kelvin equivalent diameter along its trajectory, from which one can derive the fraction of the flow as a function of the minimum Kelvin equivalent diameter encountered.
a and
Many different operating configurations, including both upward and downward temperature ramps, and parallel plate as well as cylindrical geometries, have been investigated and proven useful. All are incorporated as part of the present disclosure. While the droplet size at low concentration can be varied, the fundamental result was unchanged. Those conditions which produce large droplets at low particle concentrations showed pronounced concentration effects, with large decrease in the droplet size with increasing particle concentrations. Narrower tubes or more closely spaced plates that produce smaller droplets at low concentrations showed less decrease in droplet size with increasing concentration such that the droplet sizes at high concentrations are nearly equivalent. The use of the narrower dimensions provides less time for the droplets to grow, and hence kinetically limit the growth at low particle concentrations. At higher concentration the growth is limited by the condensational heat release. Our analysis shows that for water condensation systems, the reduction in saturation ratio at high particle concentrations is mostly due to condensational heat release, with a small contribution from vapor depletion.
The second embodiment of the technology replaces the single-stage condenser of
In one embodiment, one can maintain warm wetted walls throughout the condenser in order to promote the droplet growth. However, in alternative embodiments, this is not necessary. The saturation ratio along the centerline is nearly the same if a long, single stage condenser is used, or if an appropriately sized two-stage growth region consisting of a short warm-walled section (the initiator) followed by a cold-walled section is used.
a and 8b compares the centerline saturation ratio calculated for a 5° C. flow entering a 35° C. initiator, followed by an equilibrator operated a various wall temperatures. The walls are wetted throughout. Calculations at a downstream wall temperature of 35° C. correspond to the single stage condenser, while the other lower downstream temperatures describe various configurations of the initiator-equilibrator condenser. In all cases the length of the initiator divided by the air flow rate passing through it is 0.24 s/cm2. This length was selected to be just long enough to provide the same maximum saturation ratio as obtained with the single stage condenser. The calculations for
As shown in
Because the droplet growth is driven by the saturation ratio, the droplet growth is similar to that for the single-stage condenser.
a, 9b and 9c provide further detail for the specific case when an equilibrator operated at 20° C. is coupled to a short, 35° C. Initiator. Again, calculations are done for an flow entering flow is at 5° C. Comparison is given to a single-stage condenser with wetted 35° C. walls throughout. Shown is the saturation ratio, temperature and water vapor content along 4 trajectories, from the centerline (r/Ro=0) to near the edge of the tube (r/Ro=0.9). For fully developed laminar flow approximately half of the flow volume is contained between the trajectory at r/Ro=0.5 and the centerline.
a shows that at all radial positions the peak supersaturation is the same for the initiator-equilibrator as for the single stage condenser. This implies that the activation of particle condensational growth will be the same as for the single stage condenser. However both the temperature and water vapor content are much reduced.
As shown in
The initiator-equilibrator technology (
a shows how the length of the initiator affects the peak supersaturation. For a cylindrical geometry, the plot, as a function of initiator length, is of the maximum supersaturation achieved divided by the maximum supersaturation that is produced by an infinitely long initiator operated at the same input flow and wall temperatures. The initiator length is expressed as the ratio of this length to the volumetric flow rate passing through the tube, as above, and the walls are wetted throughout. When the walls of the initiator are 60° C. warmer than the entering flow, an initiator length to flow rate ratio in the range from 0.16 to 0.17 s/cm2 is sufficient to achieve 99% of the saturation ratio produced by an infinitely long wet walled tube. This range covers input flow temperatures ranging from 0° C. to 20° C. When the walls of the initiator are just 20° C. warmer than the entering flow, a somewhat longer initiator length to flow rate ratio of about 0.23 s/cm2 is needed to achieve 99% of the maximum supersaturation for these operating temperatures. These parameters defining the initiator length apply to a wide range of equilibrator temperatures, ranging from a 5° C. to 20° C. below the initiator temperature.
b shows the analogous calculation for a parallel plate geometry, where the length of the initiator is now plotted as the ratio to the volumetric flow per unit width of the plates q multiplied by the plate separation δ, i.e. z/(qδ). The results are quite similar. When the wall temperature of the initiator is 60° C. above the temperature of the entering flow, a ratio of the initiator length to the quantity qδ of about 0.21 s/cm2 is sufficient to achieve 99% of the saturation ratio possible with a single-stage condenser. As with the cylindrical geometry, somewhat longer initiator lengths are required when operating with a smaller temperature difference between the walls of the initiator and the flow the initiator-equilibrator condenser.
Hence, in a variety of geometries one is able to obtain the same particle activation diameters, and nearly the same droplet growth by using a two-stage condenser consisting of a short, wet-walled warm “initiator” followed by a longer colder-walled “equilibrator”, as when using a single stage warm wet walled condenser of the same overall length. Further, the required length of the Initiator to achieve the same activation size as with a single stage condenser is about 75% of distance between the condenser inlet and the point of maximum supersaturation with single stage condenser. For the calculations presented here, with the warm part of the condenser walls 30° C. warmer than the preconditoiner, this corresponds to a length (0.25 s/cm2)Q, where Q is the volumetric flow rate for a cylindrical geometry. Similarly for a parallel plate it is about (0.25 s/cm2)(q/δ) where q is the volumetric flow rate per cm of plate width, and δ is the gap between the plates. This parameter shifts slightly with different operating temperatures or inlet conditioning, but generally is in the range from 0.1 to 0.3 s/cm2. If a shorter initiator is used, the peak supersaturation will be somewhat lower that would be obtained with a longer one operated at the same temperature. If the initiator is longer, the peak supersaturation will not change, but the droplet size will be somewhat larger, but the subsequent equilibrator will still cool and reduce the water vapor content of the flow. With a relatively short initiator one can provide all of the water vapor necessary to create the same peak supersaturation as the longer single stage condenser. In the equilibrator that follows both the temperature and water vapor concentrations drop in a way that maintains a relative humidity very similar to that of the single stage condenser. This results in similar activation and growth but with a significant reduction in water vapor and temperature, and has many practical advantages when coupling detectors, focusing orifices or collectors.
The third aspect of the technology shown in
As shown in
The fourth embodiment of the technology (
The aspects described above can also be combined to form a multistage condenser. For example, the Initiator-Equilibrator described in the second embodiment can be followed by another Initiator-Equilibrator.
In addition to the modeling presented above, droplet growth predictions have been experimentally validated for the first two embodiments of the technology described above. This was done using an aerodynamic particle sizer (Model 3021 available from TSI Inc., St. Paul, Minn.) to measure the exiting droplet diameters. For the single stage condenser, these laboratory measurements confirmed that reducing the diameter of the tube from 9.5 mm to 4.6 mm reduced the shift in droplet size with particle concentration. For the second embodiment, with the short initiator followed by the cold equilibrator, our experiments confirmed that this produced nearly the same droplet size as when operating with a single stage warm walled condenser of the same diameter and length. Moreover, rather than having rather restricted flow rate range over which the condenser was effective, with the two-stage initiator-equilibrator condenser it was possible to operate over a factor of 10 in flow rate. The maximum flow rate that produced a consistent droplet sizes corresponds to an initiator length to flow rate ratio of about 0.3 s/cm2, in agreement with the modeling above. At lower flow rates the initiator was long compared to the position of maximum supersaturation, and the droplet growth was similar to that for a single stage condenser. The subsequent equilibrator simply served to provide a bit more time and distance for droplet growth while dropping the temperature and dew point.
All of the descriptions above apply to laminar flow condensers. However the equilibrator of the second embodiment of the technology could also be used as the second stage of a condenser where the first stage mixes two saturated flows at different temperatures. Mixing of saturated flows at differing temperatures is a well-established method for producing vapor supersaturation, and works with any type of condensing vapor, and is a result of the nonlinear nature of the vapor pressure equilibrium curve. Just as an equilibrator is used as the second stage of the laminar flow condenser to reduce the dew point and temperature while continuing the droplet growth, our models also show that such an equilibrator may be used as the second stage of a mixing type condenser, and similarly lowers the dew point without greatly affecting the relative humidity, and hence continues to promote the droplet growth.
Although the subject matter has been described in language specific to structural features and/or methodological acts, it is to be understood that the subject matter defined in the appended claims is not necessarily limited to the specific features or acts described above. Rather, the specific features and acts described above are disclosed as example forms of implementing the claims.
This application is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/218,393, entitled “Advanced Laminar Flow Water Condensation Technology for Ultrafine Particles”, filed Aug. 25, 2011, which application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/402,348, entitled “A Kinetically Limited Growth Cell for Concentration Independent Water Condensation on Airborne Particles”, filed Aug. 27, 2010.
This invention was made with government support under the following Grant Nos: U.S. Dept. of Energy Grant #DE-SC0004643; and National Institutes of Health Grant #ES014997. The government has certain rights in the invention.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61402348 | Aug 2010 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13218393 | Aug 2011 | US |
Child | 14318126 | US |