Title: The Changing Concerns of Filtration Efficiency
1The Changing Concerns of Filtration Efficiency
- By Dr M J Taylor
- Scientific Services Manager
- Filtrona Technology Centre
2Main Topics to be Covered
-
- Filtration of tobacco smoke
- Filter development
- Legislation
- New cigarette product developments
- Emerging filter products
- Future outlook
- Conclusion
-
3Physical Properties of Cigarette Smoke
Acetate tow microscopic structure
4Filtration of Smoke
Filter
5Cigarette Filters
6Smoke Composition
100
80
60
40
20
0
7Filtration of Smoke Particles
Scheme of the Three Main Different Impaction
Mechanisms
Direct interception
Diffusional deposition
Inertial impaction
Electrical effects
Negligible
Gravitational effects
8Filtration of Smoke Particles
- Filtration of smoke particles by impaction is the
major mechanism for tar and Nicotine reduction - But impaction only removes smoke particles and
hence has very little effect on gas or vapour
phase compounds such as volatile aldehydes,
hydrocarbons and ketones - Other filter materials such as carbon work by
adsorption - This is a different process to that shown by
fibrous filter elements and does allow the
removal of vapour phase materials
9Carbon Pore Structure
Macropore
Mesopore
Micropores
10Filtration by Adsorption on Carbon
Mesopore
Micropore
11Vapour Phase Retention
12Semi-Volatile Retention
13Filter Development
- Early filters were mainly used to keep loose
particles of tobacco from the smokers mouth - The role of the filter expanded and filters were
used for tar and Nicotine reduction - Filters became more complex and dual filters
combining two materials were introduced - Filters with granular additives especially carbon
became more common - Filters were also used as carriers for various
flavours
14Evolution of Filter Technology
- Monofilters - Acetate and Paper
- Dual Filters - Segments in Series
- Filters with Granular Additives - Dual and
Triples - Ventilation starts to emerge
- Shaped Filters
- Higher Retention Monofilters (CPF)
- Filters with Flavours
- Recess Filters
- Dual Filters - Segments in Parallel (CCF)
- Selective Filters
- New Filter Developments
1950
2003
15Legislation
- Early legislation confined to maximum tar yields.
- For example European Union maximum tar yield in
1993 was 15 mg - Generally tar and nicotine yields printed on
packets - Only in a few countries such as Australia and the
Gulf States were other smoke analytes considered.
In these countries this only went as far as the
requirement to print CO yields on the packets
16European Union Regulations for Tar, Nicotine and
CO
- 1993 15mg tar maximum.
- 1998 12mg tar maximum.
- 2004 10mg tar1mg nicotine10mg CO maximum.
- Ingredient Disclosures
- Advertising Ban
- 2007 Cigarette export delivery maximum 10110.
- Currently considering further regulations.
17Regulations implementing EU Directive 2001/37/EC
- 14 With the consequence that smokers in fact
extract the same or nearly the same levels of
nicotine and tar from a light cigarette as from a
standard variety. - It is for this reason that the Directive
proposes a ban on misleading descriptors such as
light and mild. - 40 In addition to the basic provisions on the
testing of tar, nicotine and carbon monoxide
yields, the Directive also gives member states
the power to require manufacturers or importers
to test the yields of other substances produced
by their tobacco product - 41 In addition to requiring manufacturers to test
the yield of substances other than tar, nicotine
and carbon monoxide, the Directive also requires
manufacturers to supply the government annually
with a list of all ingredients used in the
manufacture of their products, by brand name
18Americas Regulations for Tar, Nicotine and CO
- USA none.
- Canada none.
- South America
- Brazil is the only country in South America with
current legislation - Maximum levels in Brazil are Tar 10 mg Nicotine
1.0 mg CO 10 mg.
19Asia Regulations for Tar, Nicotine and CO
- Malaysia Maximum yields tar 20 mg nicotine 1.5
mg. - Hong Kong Maximum tar yield 17 mg.
- India, Japan, Korea, Thailand and the Philippines
no maximum values. - China voluntary agreement only current 15 mg Tar
maximum - 2005 12 mg.
20Other Regulations
- In some countries regulations call for a wide
range of compounds in smoke to be measured and
reported generally on an annual basis - Principally in Canada and Brazil over 40
compounds in both mainstream and sidestream smoke
have to be measured and reported on an annual
basis - These compounds are often referred to as the
Hoffmann compounds and cover a wide range
materials in smoke from gas/vapour phase
compounds to non-volatiles - Many of these compounds are harmful or
potentially carcinogenic
21Major Hoffmann Compounds
- Permanent Gasses - Carbon Monoxide, Hydrogen
Cyanide and Nitric Oxide - Organic Volatiles - Aldehydes (Formaldehyde,
Acetaldehyde, Acrolein, etc), Hydrocarbons
(Isoprene, 1,3 Butadiene, Toluene and Benzene)
and Ketones. - Semi-Volatiles - Bases (Pyridine and Quinoline)
and Phenols (Phenol, o, m p-Cresol,
Hydroquinone, Resorcinol and Catechol) - Non-Volatiles - Tobacco Specific Nitrosamines
(NNN, NNK, NAT and NAB), Aromatic Amines (12
Aminonaphthalene, 34 Aminobiphenyl) and
BenzoaPyrene
22Product Development
- Consideration of the filtration of these
compounds has lead to the development of reduced
exposure products. - However, the major aim of cigarette designers is
to reduce the yield of all the compounds on the
list when compared to standard products - These type of products generally combine the use
of standard filter materials such as cellulose
acetate with granular adsorbents such as carbon
and others. - A consequence of the aim to reduce these
compounds in smoke is a large increase in
interest in the use of carbon in filters
23New Cigarette Products
- Already a number of cigarettes have been launched
- Although most use carbon other granular materials
are now being used
24New Cigarette Products
Emerging products Innovative filter design for
lower yield products
Activated Carbon Cavity Filter
Triple Solid Active Filter
Cellulose Acetate
Activated Carbon
Ion Exchange Resin
Cellulose acetate
Activated Carbon
25Emerging Filter Products
- The requirement for lower yielding products has
lead to the development of new filter products to
help meet these needs - Some recently launched products include
- The Active Patch Filter - APF - The first
commercial mono-carbon filter - The HCN reducing filter - A filter which is
highly selective towards Hydrogen Cyanide - The COR filter - A high pressure drop low
retention filter that allows the use of
ventilation at acceptable cigarette draw
resistance to reduce the yield of many smoke
compounds
26Active Patch Filter (APF)
27Active Patch Filter
- The first commercially available mono-carbon
filter - Can be used to introduce activated carbon into a
traditionally monoacetate market without the
necessary adaptation of carbon taste
28Active Patch Filter
- Standard plugwrap for non-ventilated cigarettes
- Use on line laser to produce ventilated products
- Carbon Loading 2.9 mg per mm of filter length
- Five millimeter carbon free zone at the filter
mouth end - Three millimeter carbon free zone at the filter
tobacco rod end - Carbon loading up to 50 mg per filter
29Active Patch Filter
- Higher reductions of vapour phase and
semi-volatiles when compared to monoacetate - Clean run filter - No cutting of carbon segments
during cigarette manufacture or filter transport
30Increase in Retention APF versus Monoacetate
31The HCN Filter
- Utilises a special carbon that has been
impregnated to increase its removal of Hydrogen
Cyanide - Can be used in any current carbon filter design
- In properties and appearance this special
carbon looks the same as standard coconut shell
carbon except the much higher HCN removal
32The HCN Filter
33The HCN Filter
- The addition of the HCN removing material does
not effect the activity of the carbon to other
compounds in smoke - The HCN filter gives the same or very similar
vapour removal to other carbon filters for the
same weight of carbon but with much higher
Hydrogen Cyanide removal - The activity of the filter towards Hydrogen
Cyanide only changes slightly with either filter
or cigarette storage time
34The HCN Filter
35The HCN Filter - Effect of Cigarette Age
36The COR Filter
- Fibrous filter materials reduce tar and Nicotine
effectively and usually increasing pressure drop
increases retention efficiency - Carbon reduces vapour phase compounds
- None of the current filtration medium reduces
permanent gasses such as Carbon Monoxide - The only current efficient way to reduce Carbon
Monoxide is to use ventilation
37The COR Filter
- The problem is that high levels of ventilation
with high pressure drop/high retention filters
produces very low tar cigarettes - High levels of ventilation with lower pressure
drop/lower retention filters give acceptable tar
levels but at too low a cigarette draw resistance - The requirement is to produce a high pressure
drop but low retention filter - This can then be used in a ventilated cigarette
to give lower Carbon Monoxide yields at
acceptable cigarette draw resistances - Using ventilation to reduce Carbon Monoxide in
this way also reduces the yields of other
permanent gasses such as Nitric Oxide and many
vapour phase compounds
38The COR Filter
39The COR Filter
- Designed as a triple construction with an acetate
mouth end, an empty cavity (but could also
contain carbon) and a tobacco end segment of
acetate - The tobacco rod acetate segment is low pressure
drop and low retention - The mouth end acetate segment is high pressure
drop but low retention
40The COR Filter
- Reduction of CO yield relative to the reduction
of tar whilst offering acceptable draw
resistance, even with high ventilation levels - The COR filter also reduces the deliveries of
organic volatiles and other gas phase compounds
such as Nitric Oxide - Carbon could be used in conjunction with this
filter to enhance the reduction of organic
volatiles
41COR Filter Comparison with Monoacetate at the
same Tar Yield
Cigarette DR mm 100 Tar Yield 8 mg
42Future Outlook
- The trend towards lower yield products now seems
firmly established - The use of carbon will increase as more of these
products are launched - Other filtration medium such as Ion Exchange
Resins and selective carbons will become
increasing common in the future - Many of these selective filtration medium will be
used in conjunction with carbon in increasingly
complex filters
43Conclusions
- Over the last 50 years the use of filters on
cigarettes has grown so that over 95 of all
cigarettes sold now have filters - Early filters were relatively simple mono filters
- The filters used have generally increased in
size, complexity and retention capability - Complex filters are now firmly established and
their use is expected to grow as the demand for
reduced exposure products grows - A wide range of filter products currently exists
but this is expected to grow as the filter
performance increases to meet the demands of the
industry - Filters in 50 years time may be degradable
multi-segment filters with many different
selective filtration materials
44- Thank you for your attention
- Filtrona - Delivering Solutions through Innovation