2006 AIChE Annual Meeting
(565a) Inertial Separation of Airborne Nanoparticles with Fibrous Filters
Authors
EXPERIMENTS Stainless steel fiber mat was used as a filter material since it resists at high filtration velocities of several m/s. Polydisperse zinc chloride particle were generated by an evaporation-condensation type aerosol generator and passed though the filter. The inlet and outlet concentrations were measured by using a scanning mobility particle sizer (TSI Inc., Model 3081) for the determination of classification performance of filters.
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION By using the stainless steel fiber mat with the diameter of 8 micrometers, it is possible to have 50% cutoff diameter of particles as small as 100 nm at the filtration velocity of 50 m/s. The pressure drop across the filter was about 5 kPa. The pressure drop is relatively small compared to the low pressure impactors so that the HEPA filters placed downstream of the inertial filters can collect particles smaller than 100 nm without any significant changes in particle composition due to the evaporation of volatile species under the reduced pressures. Furthermore, by increasing the filtration area of inertial filter, we can achieve high sampling flow rate to collect particle masses sufficient to the chemical analysis, which in turn make it possible to measure the composition changes in particles with a high time resolution.
CONCLUSIONS The present work proposes a new concept of the usage of a fibrous filter, i.e., the utilization of fibrous filters for the classification of nanoparticles. The present work confirmed that the filter employed in the present work can separate particles smaller than 100 nm at the filtration velocity of 50 m/s. By selecting an appropriate filter structure and fiber diameter, it is possible to develop a classifier for separating smaller particles.