COMPACT CONDENSATION PARTICLE COUNTER TECHNOLOGY
20170276589 · 2017-09-28
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
A particle vapor reactor (PVR) includes a reactor body with a fluid flow conduit having an inlet end and an outlet end, the crossection of the conduit having a circular geometry at the inlet end, a rectangular geometry at its midsection, and a circular geometry at its outlet end. The PVR conduit defines a saturator section and a condenser section. A compact condensation particle counter (CPC) including the reactor is also disclosed. The CPC also includes a sample inlet, a fluid inlet section, a heater section, and a detector section.
Claims
1. A particle vapor reactor a comprising a reactor body with a fluid flow conduit having an inlet end and an outlet end, the crossection of the conduit having a circular geometry at the inlet end, a rectangular geometry at its midsection, and a circular geometry at its outlet end.
2. The reactor of claim 1, wherein the geometry transition at the inlet end from circular to rectangular minimizes flow separation.
3. The reactor of claim 2, wherein the geometry at the inlet end transitions from circular to obround, and wherein the geometry at the outlet end transitions from obround to circular.
4. The reactor of claim 3, wherein the dimensions of the obround section of the fluid flew conduit reduce residence time of fluid flowing within the fluid flow conduit for a given vapor concentration.
5. The reactor of claim 3, wherein the transition from obround to circular at the outlet end minimizes loss of vapor droplets due to inertia.
6. The reactor of claim 1, wherein an aerosol sample stream is input at the inlet end of the reactor body.
7. The reactor of claim 6, wherein the reactor changes the temperature and vapor concentration of a material within the aerosol sample flowing in the fluid flow conduit.
8. The reactor of claim 7, wherein the fluid flow in the conduit is laminar.
9. The reactor of claim 7, wherein the vapor concentration is changed towards the vapor concentration at the body wall of the conduit.
10. The reactor of claim 7, wherein the vapor concentration is increased via diffusion of vapor supplied from a liquid surface at the body wall of the conduit.
11. The reactor of claim 7, wherein the vapor concentration is decreased via diffusion of vapor to a liquid surface at the body wall of the conduit.
12. The reactor of claim 7, wherein the vapor concentration at the conduit body wall is defined by the temperature of the conduit body wall.
13. The reactor of claim 7, wherein the temperature of the aerosol sample flow is modified towards the temperature at the conduit body wall.
14. The reactor of claim 7, wherein the temperature of the aerosol ample flow, is increased via diffusion of thermal energy from the conduit body
15. The reactor of claim 7, wherein the temperature of the aerosol sample flow is decreased via diffusion of thermal energy to the conduit body wall.
16. The reactor of claim 7, wherein the vapor concentration within the aerosol sample is controlled to reach a predetermined, set value.
17. The reactor of wherein the predetermined vapor concentration of the aerosol sample flow is equivalent to the saturation vapor pressure defined by the conduit body wall temperature.
18. The reactor of claim 16, wherein the predetermined vapor concentration is not equivalent to the saturation vapor pressure defined by the conduit body wall temperature.
19. The reactor of claim 6, wherein the vapor concentration within the aerosol sample stream reaches a level above the saturation vapor pressure calculated using the aerosol sample stream temperature.
20. The reactor of claim 6, wherein a gas is coaxially input to the perimeter of the aerosol sample stream as a sheathing flow at the inlet end of the reactor body.
21. The reactor of claim 20 wherein the vapor concentration in the sheathing flow gas is a predetermined, fixed value.
22. The reactor of claim 20 wherein the temperature of the sheathing flow gas is a predetermined, fixed value.
23. The reactor of claim 1, wherein the fluid flow conduit has a saturator section disposed towards the inlet end and a condenser section disposed towards the outlet end.
24. The reactor of claim 23, wherein the conduit is elongated and constructed of two lateral half portions, the lateral half portions being joined along the longitudinal axis of the reactor.
25. The reactor of claim 23, wherein the conduit is elongated and constructed of four quarter portions, the quarter portions being connected into two lateral hall portions which lateral portions are then joined along the longitudinal axis of the reactor, the quarter portions of each longitudinal half portion further being separated from each other by a thermally and electrically insulative separator member.
26. The reactor of claim 1, being communicatively coupled to a condensation particle counter comprising an aerosol sample inlet communicatively connected to the reactor inlet end, a fluid supply section communicatively connected to the reactor inlet end, a heating section communicatively connected to the exterior of the reactor body, and a detection section communicatively connected to the reactor conduit outlet end.
27. A particle vapor reactor for use in a condensation particle counter, comprising: a reactor body with a fluid flow conduit having an inlet end and an outlet end, the crossection of the conduit having a circular geometry at the inlet end, a rectangular geometry at its midsection, and a circular geometry at its outlet end; wherein the input end is adapted to receive an aerosol sample stream at the inlet end of the reactor body; the fluid flow conduit defining a saturator section disposed towards the inlet d and a condenser section disposed towards the outlet end: and wherein the geometry at the inlet end transitioning from circular to Around, and the geometry at the outlet end transitioning from obround to circular.
28. A condensation particle counter, comprising: a. a particle vapor reactor a comprising a reactor body with a fluid flow conduit having an inlet end and an outlet end, the crossection of the conduit having a circular geometry at the inlet end, a rectangular geometry at its midsection, and a circular geometry at its outlet end; b. an aerosol sample inlet communicatively connected to the reactor inlet end; c. a fluid supply section communicatively connected to the reactor inlet end; d. a heating section communicatively connected to the exterior of the reactor body; and e. a detention section communicatively connected to the reactor conduit outlet end.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWING
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
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[0076] Referring also to
[0077] In the CPC 40, aerosol is introduced into the conditioner section 70 of the PVR 42 using a cylindrical conduit geometry 74 that transitions to a rectangular conduit geometry 76 (as best shown in
[0078] Although the aerosol is disclosed as being sheathed in this embodiment, it is within the purview of the invention may he unsheathed, and occupy the entire crossection of the conduit. An example of a CPC operating unsheathed is shown in
[0079] In one mode of use, the partial pressure of a vapor is greater than the partial pressure of that vapor over a flat surface composed the vapor's condensed phase (Supersaturation). For particles larger than a critical diameter, the vapor molecules condense onto the particles resulting in an increase of the particle diameter by orders of magnitude. The enlarged droplet/particle entities are easily detected using common light scattering methods via the detector section 50. And, with for a given counting rate and aerosol flow rate, a particle concentration is calculated. At sufficiently high supersaturation levels, the condensation process will initiate for particles which are too small to he detected using optical methods typically employed for single aerosol particle counting. In this embodiment, supersaturation is achieved via known diabatic heat and mass transfer processes.
[0080] In another mode of use, the partial pressure of a vapor is less than the partial pressure of that vapor over a flat surface composed the vapor's condensed phase (Subsaturation). This embodiment of the particle-vapor reactor can be used to raise or lower the vapor pressure within an aerosol to study sorption related phenomena and or chemical reactions between particles and vapor molecules.
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[0084] A second embodiment of the CPC 100 is shown in
[0085] Referring also to
[0086] The CPC 100 and PVR 102 function as follows. An analyte is continuously aspirated into a cylindrical conduit AI where a portion of the analyte near the conduit walls acting as a transport flow is axisymmetrically aspirated from the conduit at ST. The remaining analyte passes through a sample conduit at SC. The transport flow is filtered to remove particles and a prescribed volumetric rate is axisymmetrically reintroduced around the sample conduit as a sheath flow at SM. The sheath flowrate is nominally equivalent to the transport flowrate. Optionally, a flow valve (for example, a flow rate valve 32 as shown in
[0087] The sheathed sample exits a cylindrical conduit at SS and enters the saturator section 120 a region at TR where the cross section of the conduit transitions from circular to obround. Starting at this transition, the conduit is fabricated from a material that supplies a liquid film at the wall surface such as a porous metal, felt, membrane, or porous plastic WI and W11. The liquid is preferably provided by a push/pull pumping system where a communicatively connected liquid supply pump (not shown) injects liquid from a supply bottle or the like (not shown) to the base of the porous section at BI and a communicatively connected drain pump (not shown) removes the liquid at BE and returns it to the supply bottle. The drain rate is greater than the supply rate which ensures that a minimal volume of liquid is present in the system. Liquid is also confirmed by monitoring the increased conductivity between F1 and the outer metal surface of the porous conduit when liquid is present. The liquid at the surface maintains a saturated vapor pressure that diffuses into the sheathed sample flow while simultaneously the temperature of the flow is modulated to the wall temperature. The wall temperature is controlled using heaters 108 installed at H1 and H2. The saturator section 120 is sufficiently long so that the vapor pressure and temperature of sheathed sample flow reach design conditions. For the device described herein the design conditions are a Log Mean Temperature Difference (LMTD)<1% and a Saturation Ratio (S=Vapor pressure/Saturated Vapor Pressure)>0.9.
[0088] Following the saturator section, the sheathed sample enters the condenser section 122 where the conduit walls are maintained at a prescribed temperature. The saturator and condenser conduits are separated by a short conduit fabricated from a thermally insulating and static dissipative material at SP. As the sheathed sample traverses the condenser section 122 the temperature and vapor pressure of the flow modulates to the match the wall conditions. The wall temperature in the condenser section 122 is controlled using thermoelectrics devices installed at T1 and T2. Supersaturation is achieved by exploiting the Lewis number (Le) for the system (Le=ratio of thermal diffusivity to vapor diffusivity). For systems where Le>1 the condenser walls are held at a lower temperature than the hulk temperature of the flow. This results in the temperature of the flow decreasing at a faster rate than the vapor pressure. The resulting ratio of the actual vapor pressure to the saturated vapor pressure calculated from the gas temperature is referred to as the Saturation ratio (S). The supersaturated vapor will then condense onto sufficiently large particles within the sheathed sample flow. The system is designed such that following supersaturation, the total condensed vapor onto the particles is controlled by reducing the residence time of the particles in this region. Controlling the amount of condensed vapor will reduce modulation of the temperature and vapor pressure caused by high particle concentrations.
[0089] Near the exit of the condenser section 122 the conduit transitions from an obround to circular shape at TE. The transition back to cylindrical flow at SE is done to facilitate focusing the sample stream at nozzle N1. The flow then enters an optical detection device OP where the sample passes through a region with incident electromagnetic radiation that is scattered by the presence of a sufficiently large object (in this case, a particle with condensed vapor). The scattered radiation is detected by a sensor and is registered as a detected particle by the device.
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[0097] The embodiments above are chosen, described and illustrated so that persons skilled in the art will be able to understand the invention and the manner and process of making and using it. The descriptions and the accompanying drawings should be interpreted in the illustrative and not the exhaustive or limited sense. The invention is not intended to be limited to the exact forms disclosed. While the application attempts to disclose all of the embodiments of the invention that are reasonably foreseeable, there may be unforeseeable insubstantial modifications that remain as equivalents. It should be understood by persons skilled in the art that there may be other embodiments than those disclosed which fall within the scope of the invention as defined by the claims. Where a claim, if any, is expressed as a means or step for performing a specified function it is intended that such claim be construed to cover the corresponding structure, material, or acts described in the specification and equivalents thereof, including both structural equivalents and equivalent structures, material-based equivalents and equivalent materials, and act-based equivalents and equivalent acts.