Title: Ambient Aerosol Sampling
1Ambient Aerosol Sampling
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What parameters might we need to measure using an
aerosol sampler in the environment?
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2Introduction
- Reasons for ambient aerosol sampling
- Regulations
- Deposition/Visibility
- Determine properties of pollutants
- Determine source of aerosol
Why do we need to know these parameters?
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Note a sampling system may be designed for one
purpose, but may also meet multiple sampling
goals!
3Learning Objectives!
- Requirements of ambient aerosol samplers
- Components required to meet those requirements
- Discuss existing sampling units
4Sampling System Requirements
- General Requirements
- Well-defined size fractions - Why?
- Filter media which are compatible with the
intended analysis method(s) - Stable sample volumes that do not overload the
filter yet provide sufficient deposit for
analysis - Sampling surfaces that do not react with the
measured species What might react? - Available, cost effective, and practical hardware
5Source Apportionment Models
- Also called receptor models
- These use chemical/physical characteristics of
gasses and particles to identify and quantify
contributions from a specific source - In order to distinguish contributions from one
source to another, characteristics must be - Present in different proportions in different
source emissions - Proportions must remain relatively constant
- Changes in these proportions between the source
and receptor must be negligible
6Some Specific Requirements
- PM and TSP
- Wind tunnel testing must be performed for the
inlet - Must have sufficient sampling efficiency (gt99)
and high alkalinity standards for filter media - Must have stability of sample flow rates
- Precision of gravimetric analysis must be high
- PM2.5
- Samples are taken for differing amounts of time
concurrent with visible haze during daylight
hours for visibility standards
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7Components of a Sampling Unit
- One of more size-selective inlets
- Sampling surfaces
- Filters
- Filter holders
- Flow movement and control device
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8Sampling Inlets
- Designed to remove particles which
exceed a specified aerodynamic diameter
characterized by the 50 cut point (dp50) and a
standard deviation - Sampling effectiveness curves are created to
determine the fraction of aerosol penetrating the
inlet at given conditions - Experimentally determined using known
concentrations of similarly sized particles at
different velocities in a wind tunnel
9Sampling Inlets (cont.)
- Operate on several principals
- Direct Impaction consists of a set of circular
jets positioned about an impaction plate - Virtual Impaction impaction surface is replaced
with an opening that isolates larger particles - Cyclonic Flow centrifugal force impacts
particles onto a cylinder wall - Selective Filtration uniform pore sizes select
particles below a certain size - Elutriation particles are drawn into a
stilled-air chamber, smaller particles with a
slower settling velocity will be drawn upwards
while larger particles will settle faster than
the upwards flow, not to be collected - Impaction and cyclonic flow are most commonly
implemented, why? - Note inlets must be independent of ambient wind
speed and direction!
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11Sampling Surfaces
- Most are made out of aluminum (usually
oxidized), stainless steel, or plastic
(polycarbonate or polyvinyl chloride) - Plastic surfaces can acquire charges which may
attract suspended particles, though in most
sampling units these charges are negligible due
to the unit size - It is important that the surfaces do not react
with the influent - Reactive gasses (especially acids) can create a
problem here, a denuder may be used to separate
them
12Filters
- Used as the collection media once a given cut
size has entered through the inlet - Several qualities are taken into consideration
- Mechanical stability
- Chemical stability
- Particle or gas sampling efficiency
- Flow resistance
- Loading capacity
- Blank values
- Artifact formation
- Compatibility with analysis methods
- Cost and availability
- No one type of filter meets all of these
categorical requirements, and the correct filter
type must be selected for appropriate use - Several types of filters will be outlined
13Filters (cont.)
- Cellulose Fiber
- Tightly woven paper mat
- Meets all categorical requirements except
sampling efficiency and water vapor artifacts - Sampling efficiency is highly dependent on the
weave - Material is hygroscopic, so care must be taken
when considering differential mass - Glass Fiber
- Tightly woven mat of borosilicate glass filaments
- Meets all categorical requirements except
artifact formation and blank levels - High alkalinity in fibers allow for collection of
acidic species
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14Filters (cont.)
- Teflon-coated Glass Fiber
- Glass fiber filter coated with Teflon
- Meets all categorical requirements except blank
element and carbon levels - Teflon Membrane
- Porous Teflon sheet which is either stretched
across a plastic ring or supported by a loosely
woven Teflon mat - Meets all categorical requirements except flow
resistance and carbon blank levels - Small pore size makes high-volume sampling nearly
impossible
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15Filters (cont.)
- Etched Polycarbonate Membrane
- Thin polycarbonate sheet through which pores of
uniform diameter have been produced by
radioactive particle penetration and chemical
etching - Meets categorical requirements in all fields
except sampling efficiency - Sampling efficiency is generally lt 80 despite
small pore size - Best filter for electron microscopy when
isolating a single particle type - Filter retains significant electric charge and
should be discharged before use
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16Filters (cont.)
- Quartz Fiber
- Tightly woven mat of quartz filaments
- Meets all categorical requirements except
artifact formation - Formation of compounds on this material is
significantly lower than glass fiber - Readily absorbs hydrocarbons and should be heated
to 800 Celsius to remove prior to use - Nylon Membrane
- Thin sheets of porous nylon
- Used almost exclusively for the collection of
nitric acid
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17Filter Holders
- This device holds the filter media in place and
protects it from contamination prior to, during,
and after sampling - These holders must
- Mate to the sampler and to the flow system
without leaks - Be composed of inert materials which do not
absorb acidic gasses - Allow a uniformly distributed deposit to be
collected - Have a low pressure drop across the empty holder
- Accommodate the sizes of commonly available air
sampling filters (37 mm or 47 mm) - Be durable and reasonably priced
18Filter Holders (cont.)
- In-line
- These filter holders focus the air stream towards
the center of the filter - Open-faced
- Spread air flow before filter surface
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Advantages? Disadvantages?
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19Flow Movement and Control Devices
- Air is passed through a sampling system by vacuum
using a pump - There are four ways to measure the flow through
the system - Manual volumetric
- Automatic mass
- Differential pressure volume
- Critical orifice volume
20Flow Movement and Control Devices (cont.)
- Manual Volumetric
- This method of flow control is accomplished when
the system is preset by the user using a valve or
other control device and then relies on known
information about the system to gauge the flow - The flow may change by up to 10 for most systems
as the filter becomes loaded when using this
method since the valve remains constant once a
sample has initiated - Automatic Mass
- These flow controllers measure heat transfer
between two points in the gas stream this heat
transfer is proportional to the flux of gas
molecules between the two points - PV nRT
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21Flow Movement and Control Devices (cont.)
- Differential Pressure Volume
- Maintains a constant pressure across an orifice
by a diaphragm-controlled valve located between
the filter and the orifice - As pressure increases due to filter loading, the
diaphragm becomes unseated and allows more
pressure onto the filters surface to compensate - Critical Orifice Volume
- A small circular orifice between the filter and
the pump regulates flow when the pressure
downstream of the orifice is less than 53 of the
upstream pressure, the air velocity attains the
speed of sound and it will remain constant
regardless of increased flow resistance - These flow control devices are useful only for
low flow rates (lt20 LPM) and large pumps with
large pressure drops
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22What Now?
- Once a filter has been loaded with particles,
there are several ways to test it. Here are a
few - Mass
- Radiation
- Optical
23Sampling Systems
24Sampling System TEOM
- Provides direct measurement of PM collected on a
filter using tapered element oscillating
microbalance technology - Can change inlets to target PM10, PM2.5, PM1, or
TSP (total suspended particle) monitoring - Collection filters can be analyzed for heavy
metals - Active volumetric flow control using pressure and
temperature sensors - This device is recognized by the US EPA for PM10
and PM2.5 measurements - TEOM mass detectors operate using basic inertial
mass, that is, inertial impaction on the filters
give a real-time particulate mass
Tapered element oscillating microbalance
technology
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25Sampling System Beta Gauge
- Provides particulate mass measurement on a real
time scale - Utilizes beta electrons to load the particles on
a sliding filter with beta emissions, which are
then compared to a blank area on the filter and
can be used to determine differential mass
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26Confusion in Ambient Sampling?
- Some samplers, especially at the inlet, have
different levels of collection efficiency of
particles - Also, EPA allows a tolerance on PM10 particles of
.5 µm - These factors compound on each other and can lead
to misinterpreted data in sampling methods - For example,
- The Wedding high-volume cyclonic inlet had a d50
of 9.6 µm - The Sierra-Anderson high-volume direct impaction
inlet had a d50 of 10.2 µm - Which one would you pick?
27Summary