Mass spectrometric analysis and aerodynamic properties of various types of combustion-related aerosol particles. Schneider, J., Weimer, S., Drewnick, F., Borrmann, S., Helas, G., Gwaze, P., Schmid, O., Andreae, M., & Kirchner, U. International Journal of Mass Spectrometry, 258(1-3):37-49, 12, 2006.
Mass spectrometric analysis and aerodynamic properties of various types of combustion-related aerosol particles [pdf]Paper  Mass spectrometric analysis and aerodynamic properties of various types of combustion-related aerosol particles [link]Website  abstract   bibtex   
Various types of combustion-related particles in the size range between 100 and 850nm were analyzed with an aerosol mass spectrometer and a differential mobility analyzer. The measurements were performed with particles originating from biomass burning, diesel engine exhaust, laboratory combustion of diesel fuel and gasoline, as well as from spark soot generation. Physical and morphological parameters like fractal dimension, effective density, bulk density and dynamic shape factor were derived or at least approximated from the measurements of electrical mobility diameter and vacuum aerodynamic diameter. The relative intensities of the mass peaks in the mass spectra obtained from particles generated by a commercial diesel passenger car, by diesel combustion in a laboratory burner, and by evaporating and re-condensing lubrication oil were found to be very similar. The mass spectra from biomass burning particles show signatures identified as organic compounds like levoglucosan but also others which are yet unidentified. The aerodynamic behavior yielded a fractal dimension (D-f) of 2.09 +/- 0.06 for biomass burning particles from the combustion of dry beech sticks, but showed values around three, and hence more compact particle morphologies, for particles from combustion of more natural oak. Scanning electron microscope images confirmed the finding that the beech combustion particles were fractal-like aggregates, while the oak combustion particles displayed a much more compact shape. For particles from laboratory combusted diesel fuel, a D-f value of 2.35 was found, for spark soot particles, D-f approximate to 2.10. The aerodynamic properties of fractal-like particles from dry beech wood combustion indicate an aerodynamic shape factor chi that increases with electrical mobility diameter, and a bulk density of 1.92 g cm(-3). An upper limit of chi approximate to 1.2 was inferred for the shape factor of the more compact particles from oak combustion. (c) 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Downloads: 0