Title: How do we characterize aerosols
1How do we characterize aerosols?
- Size
- Monodisperse All the particles are of the same
size - Polydisperse Particles are of more than one size
- Concentration
- Number concentration by counting
- Mass concentration by weight measurement
- Ex Particles in room air
- N 104 /cc
- M 5.236?10-6 g/cc
- dp 10-3 cm 10 ?m
- Q Does this mean all the 104 particles in 1 cc
air are 10 ?m? - What is the effect if we use this size to
represent the system? (e.g. in inhalation
system) - How can we better describe this aerosol system?
2Particle Size Distribution
Reading Hinds, Chap 4
Typical data from measurement
3Histogram of frequency(count) versus particle size
Q Which size range has the most particles?
4Frequency/?dp (distribution function) vs particle
size
Q Total of particles ? Q TiO2 pigment is
produced by aerosol process in DuPont. If the
production rate is increased 10 folds, how do I
know the product still maintains the same
particle size distribution?
5Standardized frequency/?dp vs particle size
Q What is the value of the total area?
6Continuous Particle Size Distribution
If the size range is very small, the discrete PSD
will approach continuous PSD.
q(dp) q as a function of dp
7Cumulative Distribution
- Definition
- The fraction that is less than a specific size
- Why cumulative distribution?
- Provide another viewpoint to observe the
distribution.
Q Whats the RED spot?
Q Whats the annual income of a starting
engineer?
8- MEAN (arithmetic average)
- The sum of all the particles sizes divided by the
number of particles - MEDIAN
- The diameter for which 50 of the total are
smaller and 50 are larger the diameter
corresponds to a cumulative fraction of 50 - MODE
- Most frequent size setting the derivative of the
frequency function to 0 and solving for dp. - For a symmetrical distribution, the mean, median
and mode have the same value.
9- GEOMETRIC MEAN
- the Nth root of the product of N values
- Expressed in terms of ln(dp)
- For a monodisperse aerosol,
- otherwise,
- Very commonly used because an aerosol system
typically covers a wide size range from 0.001 to
1000 ?m
n(dp) n as a function of dp
10Weighted Distributions
- Why do we need other distributions?
- Aerosols may be measured in different ways, and
in indirect ways (e.g. impactors, light
scattering) - What are the other distributions?
- Definition frequency of the property (e.g. mass,
number) contributed by particles of the size
interval - What is the effect?
- Ex. A system containing spherical particles
(mode size?) - Number Concentration Mass
Concentration - 100 /cc 1?m ?1.91g/cm3 10-11 g/cc 1?m
- 1 /cc 10?m
10-9 g/cc 10?m
Q How will the PSD on page 6 look like if
plotted as mass distribution?
11Number Distribution
Mass Distribution
Q What is the mode size of the distribution?
Important to clarify the type of distribution
reported.
12- Count Mean Diameter based on number of
particles. - Mass Mean Diameter based on mass of particles.
Conversion
Q In addition to the representative size, what
other aerosol property can we use to present the
aerosol size distribution in a concise way?
13Moments of the PSD
- Definition The quantity proportional to particle
size raised to a power an integral aerosol
property
Q What is Mo?
n(dp) n as a function of dp
Q What is M1? Q What is M1/M0? Q What is
M2/M0? M3/M0? Q Which is larger? M1/M0?
(M2/M0)1/2? (M3/M0)1/3?
14Volume Moments
- Particle volume, instead of particle diameter, is
also used as a variable (i.e. the x-axis is
particle volume, not size) - Definition
- Conversion of n? to ndp
Q What is M1?/M0??
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
15Lognormal PSD
- Various distributions Power law, Exponential,
...etc. Very limited application in aerosol
science - Normal Distribution widely used elsewhere, but
typically not for aerosol science, because - most aerosols exhibit a skewed distribution
function - if a wide size range is covered, a certain
fraction of the particles may have negative
values due to symmetry.
frequency function
standard deviation
16Why using Lognormal?
- The application of a lognormal distribution has
no theoretical basis, but has been found to be
applicable to most single source aerosols - Useful for particle of a wide range of values
(largest/smaller size gt 10) - Its mathematical form is very convenient when
handling weighted distributions and moments. - How to use it? Simply replace dp by lndp.
geometric mean diameter
17geometric standard deviation
Q Whats the unit of ?g?
frequency function
Convert dlndp to ddp
particle volume based function
18- Features of Lognormal PSD
For a given distribution, the geometric standard
deviation remains constant (nondimensional) for
all weighted distributions.
Q If sg 1.5, how much is d84/d16?
Log-Probability graph
Measurement from a cascade impactor
Is this a log-normal distribution? Whats its
d50? sg?
Get graph paper from http//sorrel.humboldt.edu/g
eodept/geology531/graph_paper_index.html
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20Moments for lognormally distributed aerosols
The statistical variables can be easily
determined through the moments!
Ref Lee, K. W. and Chen, H., Aerosol Sci.
Technol., 3, 1984, 327-334. Lee, K. W.,
Chen, H. and Gieseke, J. A., Aerosol Sci.
Technol., 3, 1984, 53-62.
21Hatch-Choate Conversion Eq.
(Table 4.3)
- p type of average
- 0 median/geometric
- 1 mean
- 2 area
- 3 volume/mass
- q weighted distribution
- 0 count
- 1 length
- 2 area
- 3 volume/mass
b q p/2
Q If CMD 10 mm and sg 2, how much is
MMD? Diameter of average mass?
22Reflection