PARTICLE CHARGER
20170229275 · 2017-08-10
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B03C3/47
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H01J49/12
ELECTRICITY
B03C3/38
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H01J37/321
ELECTRICITY
H01J37/32357
ELECTRICITY
B03C3/017
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B03C2201/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H01J37/32009
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01J49/12
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A particle charger is provided with: a filter (28) partitioning the inside of a housing (20) into a first space (29) and second space (30); a particle introducer (22) for introducing a particle into the first space; a gas ion supplier (10) for supplying the first space with a gas ion; a potential gradient creator (26, 27, 31) for creating a potential difference within the housing so as to make the gas ion and a charged particle resulting from a contact of the aforementioned particle with the gas ion move toward the second space; an AC voltage supplier (32, 33) for applying AC voltages having a phase difference to the neighboring electrodes (28a, b) included in the filter; a controller (35) for performing a control for applying, to the plurality of electrodes, predetermined voltages so as to allow the charged particle to pass through a gap between the electrodes while trapping the gas ion by the electrodes; and a charged particle extractor (23, 25, 34) for extracting the charged particle admitted to the second space to the outside of the housing. By this configuration, the occurrence frequency of the multi-charging is suppressed.
Claims
1. A particle charger, comprising: a) a housing; b) a filter composed of a plurality of electrodes extending in a virtual surface partitioning an inside of the housing into a first space and a second space; c) a particle introducer for introducing a particle to be charged into the first space; d) a gas ion supplier for supplying the first space with a gas ion; e) a potential gradient creator for creating a potential gradient within the housing so as to make the gas ion and a charged particle resulting from a contact of the aforementioned particle with the gas ion move from the first space toward the second space; f) an AC voltage supplier for applying an AC voltage to each of the electrodes forming the filter, where the voltages applied to any two electrodes neighboring each other among the plurality of electrodes have a phase difference; g) a controller for controlling the AC voltage supplier so as to apply, to the plurality of electrodes, voltages which are previously determined so that, among the charged particle and the gas ion moving from the first space toward the second space, the charged particle is allowed to pass through a gap between the electrodes while the gas ion is trapped by one of the electrodes; and h) a charged particle extractor for extracting the charged particle admitted to the second space to an outside of the housing.
2. The particle charger according to claim 1, wherein the charged particle extractor produces a stream of carrier gas within the second space and carries the charged particle to the outside of the housing by the stream of carrier gas.
3. The particle charger according to claim 1, wherein the charged particle extractor creates a potential gradient within the second space in a direction intersecting with the potential gradient and draws the charged particle to the outside of the housing by a motion of the charged particle along the former gradient.
4. The particle charger according to claim 1, wherein the filter is composed of a plurality of rod electrodes arranged parallel to each other.
5. The particle charger according to claim 1, wherein the filter is composed of a plurality of rod electrodes arranged in a form of a grid.
6. The particle charger according to claim 1, wherein the filter is composed of a plurality of circular electrodes arranged in a concentric form.
7. The particle charger according to claim 2, wherein the filter is composed of a plurality of rod electrodes arranged parallel to each other.
8. The particle charger according to claim 3, wherein the filter is composed of a plurality of rod electrodes arranged parallel to each other.
9. The particle charger according to claim 2, wherein the filter is composed of a plurality of rod electrodes arranged in a form of a grid.
10. The particle charger according to claim 3, wherein the filter is composed of a plurality of rod electrodes arranged in a form of a grid.
11. The particle charger according to claim 2, wherein the filter is composed of a plurality of circular electrodes arranged in a concentric form.
12. The particle charger according to claim 3, wherein the filter is composed of a plurality of circular electrodes arranged in a concentric form.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
[0028]
[0029]
[0030]
[0031]
[0032]
[0033]
[0034]
[0035]
[0036]
[0037]
DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
[0038] Modes for carrying out the present invention are hereinafter described with reference to the drawings.
[0039] The particle charger according to the present embodiment, which is designed to be placed between the sampler 100 and the classifier 300 in a particle classifying and observing system as shown in
[0040] The particle-charging unit 20 has a substantially rectangular parallelepiped chamber 21 (which corresponds to the housing in the present invention). On the left wall of this chamber 21, a first upward-side opening 22 (which corresponds to the particle introducer in the present invention) and a second upward-side opening 23 are vertically arranged, both of which are the openings for allowing an inflow of gas from the outside into the chamber 21. On the right wall of the chamber 21, a first downward-side opening 24 and a second downward-side opening 25 are vertically arranged, both of which are the openings for discharging gas from the chamber 21 to the outside. This chamber 21 contains a first plate electrode 26 arranged along the top face of the chamber 21, a second plate electrode 27 arranged along the bottom face of the chamber 21, and a filter 28 located between the first and second plate electrodes 26 and 27. This filter 28 is composed of a plurality of rod electrodes 28a and 28b arranged parallel to each other and at regular intervals in a plane parallel to the first and second plate electrodes 26 and 27, with each rod electrode extending in the front-rear direction. Actually, the filter 28 is composed of a large number of electrodes 28a and 28b, as shown in
[0041] Provided outside the chamber 21 of the particle-charging unit are a DC power source 31 for applying voltage V.sub.1 to the first plate electrode 26 and voltage V.sub.2 to the second plate electrode 27, as well as a first AC power source 32 and a second AC power source 33 for applying AC voltages to the electrodes forming the filter 28. The first and second AC power sources 32 and 33 correspond to the AC voltage supplier in the present invention. The first plate electrode 26, second plate electrode 27 and DC power source 31 cooperating with each other function as the potential gradient creator in the present invention. The first AC power source 32 supplies AC voltage V.sub.3 sin(ωt) to the electrodes 28a located at the odd-numbered positions as counted from the left end among the large number of electrodes 28a and 28b forming the filter 28. On the other hand, the second AC power source 33 supplies AC voltage V.sub.4 sin(ωt+δ), which has a phase difference of δ from the AC voltage supplied by the first AC power source 32, to the electrodes 28b located at the even-numbered positions as counted from the left end among the large number of electrodes. There is no specific limitation on the phase difference δ, although a value within a range of 90° to 270° is preferable. The amplitudes V.sub.3 and V.sub.4, frequency ω, as well as phase difference δ of the AC voltages supplied by the first and second AC power sources 32 and 33 are controlled by a controller 35. The controller 35 also operates the aforementioned DC power source 31 and a discharge power source 14 (which will be described later), although the control lines for these devices are omitted from the figure for simplicity.
[0042] The gas-ion generating unit 10 also has a substantially rectangular parallelepiped chamber 11, which contains a needle-shaped discharge electrode 12 vertically extending downward from the top face. Located on the inner bottom of the same chamber 11 is a plate-shaped ground electrode 13 which forms a pair with the discharge electrode 12. Outside the chamber 11, a discharge power source 14 for applying a voltage for inducing electric discharge to the discharge electrode 12 is provided. Additionally, a gas introduction port 15 for introducing a gas for gas-ion generation (“ionization gas”) into the chamber 11 is formed on the side wall of the chamber 11, while an opening for allowing an outflow of the ions generated within the chamber 11 (those ions are hereinafter called the “gas ions”) into the first space 29 is formed in the bottom wall of the chamber 11 The ground electrode 13, top wall of the chamber 21 of the particle-charging unit 20, and first plate electrode 26 are also provided with through-holes formed at the position corresponding to the aforementioned opening. The opening and those through-holes form a gas-ion discharge port 16 through which the inner space of the chamber 21 of the particle-charging unit 20 communicates with that of the chamber 11 of the gas-ion generating unit 10.
[0043] In the process of generating charged particles by the particle charger according to the present embodiment, an ionization gas (e.g. air) is initially introduced from the gas introduction port 15 into the chamber 11 of the gas-ion generating unit 10, and a voltage is applied from the discharge power source 14 to the discharge electrode 12. As a result, electric discharge occurs in the space between the discharge electrode 12 and the ground electrode 13, whereby the ionization gas within the chamber 11 is ionized. The polarity of the thereby generated gas ions depends on the polarity of the voltage applied to the discharge electrode 12. In the following description, it is assumed that the gas ions are positive ions. The gas ions generated in the gas-ion generating unit 10 flow through the gas-ion discharging port 16 into the first space 29 in the particle-charging unit 20.
[0044] Meanwhile, the particles collected as the charging target by the sampler 100 (
[0045] Since the first space 29 contains gas ions at a high density, the particles to be charged introduced from the first upward-side opening 22 into the first space 29 come in contact with the gas ions and become positively charged by receiving electric charges from the gas ions.
[0046] Due to the voltage application by the DC power source 31, the potential V.sub.1 of the first plate electrode 26 is higher than the potential V.sub.2 of the second plate electrode 27, i.e. V.sub.1>V.sub.2, whereby a potential gradient whose level decreases in the direction indicated by the thick white arrows in
[0047] Meanwhile, the filter 28 provided between the first and second spaces 29 and 30 is supplied with the AC voltages whose phases differ from each other between any two electrodes 28a and 28b neighboring each other in the right-left direction. Therefore, the gas ions and charged particles which attempt to pass through the gap between the two electrodes 28a and 28b while moving downward within the chamber 21 in the previously described manner alternately experience attractive and repulsive forces from the electrodes 28a and 28b on both sides. In this process, an object having a comparatively high mobility (which is a value representing how easily a charged particle can move in an electric field) is quickly attracted to and collides with one of the electrodes, failing to pass through the gap between the two electrodes. By comparison, an object having a comparatively low mobility is attracted toward the opposite direction due to the attractive force from the other electrode before it collides with one of the electrodes. Therefore, this object can pass through the gap between the two electrodes 28a and 28b, oscillating in the right-left direction in a stable manner.
[0048] The charged panicles generated by the panicle charger in the present embodiment have sufficiently lower mobilities than the gas ions. Accordingly, by appropriately adjusting the values related to the conditions (amplitude, frequency and phase difference) of the voltages applied by the first and second AC power sources 32 and 33, it is possible to realize the situation that only the charged particles are allowed to pass through the filter 28 and reach the second space 30 while the gas ions are trapped by the filter 28 and prevented from reaching the second space 30. In other words, as shown in
[0049] The conditions of the voltages applied to the filter 28 so as to allow the passage of only the charged particles in the previously described manner are, for example, previously investigated by experiments for each condition (kind, diameter, etc.) of the particles as the charging target and stored in a storage unit 36. When a target particle to be charged is specified by a user, the controller 35 refers to the information stored in the storage unit 36, determines the conditions of the voltages corresponding to the target particle, and controls the first and second AC power sources 32 and 33 so that those voltages are applied to the electrodes 28a and 28b forming the filter 28.
[0050] The charged particles which have reached the second space 30 are carried rightwards within the second space 30 by the stream of ca gas directed from the second upward-side opening 23 to the second downward-side opening 25. Subsequently, the charged particles are extracted from the second downward-side opening 25 to the outside of the chamber 11 and sent to the particle classifier 300 provided in the subsequent stage (
[0051] In this manner, in the particle charger according to the present embodiment, the charged particles generated by coming in contact with the gas ions are promptly extracted to the area where no gas ion is present (the second space 30), whereby the occurrence of the multi-charging is effectively suppressed and the ratio of singly-charged particles is increased. Therefore, in the process of extracting particles having a certain diameter by classification, the mixture of unwanted particles which have different diameters and yet have approximately the same mobility due to the multi-charging is suppressed. Therefore, for example, the accuracy of the particle diameter distribution can be improved, or a high level of collection efficiency can be achieved for particles having a specific particle diameter.
[0052] The previously described example is concerned with the configuration in which the gas ions are positive ions and the particles are positively charged by corning into contact with those gas ions. It is also possible to use the opposite configuration in which the gas ions are negative ions and the particles are negatively charged by coming into contact with the gas ions. In this case, the potential V.sub.1 of the first plate electrode 26 is set to be lower than the potential V.sub.2 of the second plate electrode 27.
[0053] In the previous example, the electrodes 28a and 28b forming the filter 28 are arranged so that they extend in the right-left direction, i.e. in the orthogonal direction to the stream of the carrier gas. The arrangement is not limited to this form. For example, as shown in
[0054] Other than the configuration in which straight electrodes are arranged parallel to each other as shown in
[0055] The cross-sectional shape of each electrode is also not specifically limited. Other than the circular shape as shown in
[0056] In the previous embodiment, the charged particles which have reached the second space 30 are extracted to the outside of the chamber 21 by a stream of carrier gas. Alternatively, for example, the extraction of the charged particles may be achieved by an extracting electric field created within the second space 30. In this case, as shown in
[0057] Furthermore, the particle extractor in the present invention may also be configured to extract the charged particles by using both the stream of carrier gas and the extracting electric field. In this case, the opposite electrode 61 in
[0058] The particle charger according to the present invention can be applied not only in a particle classifying and observing system as shown in
EXAMPLE
[0059] Hereinafter described is a simulation by numerical computation performed to confirm the effect of the particle charger according to the present invention. In this simulation, a system as shown in
[0060]
REFERENCE SIGNS LIST
[0061] 10 . . . Gas-Ion Generating Unit
[0062] 11 . . . Chamber
[0063] 12 . . . Discharge Electrode
[0064] 13 . . . Ground Electrode
[0065] 14 . . . Discharge Power Source
[0066] 15 . . . Gas Introduction Port
[0067] 16 . . . Gas-Ion Discharge Port [0068] 20 . . . Particle Charging Unit
[0069] 21 . . . Chamber
[0070] 22 . . . First Upward-Side Opening
[0071] 23 . . . Second Upward-Side Opening
[0072] 24 . . . First Downward-Side Opening
[0073] 25 . . . Second Downward-Side Opening
[0074] 26 . . . First Plate Electrode
[0075] 27 . . . Second Plate Electrode
[0076] 28 . . . Filter [0077] 28a . . . Electrode [0078] 28b . . . Electrode
[0079] 29 . . . First Space
[0080] 30 . . . Second Space
[0081] 31 . . . DC Power Source
[0082] 32 . . . First AC Power Source
[0083] 33 . . . Second AC Power Source
[0084] 34 . . . Carrier Gas Supplier [0085] 35 . . . Controller [0086] 36 . . . Storage Unit [0087] 41 . . . Gas Ion [0088] 42 . . . Charged Particle [0089] 61 . . . Opposite Electrode [0090] 62 . . . Extraction Electrode [0091] 63 . . . Opening