A Laminar-Flow, Water-Based Condensation Particle Counter (WCPC)
Open Access
- 1 July 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Aerosol Science and Technology
- Vol. 39 (7) , 659-672
- https://doi.org/10.1080/02786820500182123
Abstract
A new water-based condensation particle counter (WCPC) is presented. The WCPC is a thermally diffusive, laminar flow instrument. Condensational enlargement is achieved through the introduction of a saturated airflow into a “growth tube” with wetted walls held at a temperature higher than that of the entering flow. An unsheathed, 1 L/min instrument utilizing this principle has been evaluated with various aerosols. The particle size detected with an efficiency of 50% is at or below 4.8 nm for particles sampled from vehicular emissions or ambient air, and for various laboratory-generated inorganic salts. The cut point is higher for the organic materials tested, ranging from 8 nm to 30 nm depending on the compound and purity level. An empirically determined dead-time correction factor is applied to the coincidence correction, which allows extension of the single-count mode to higher concentrations. The counting efficiencies for 80 nm oil and salt aerosols are equal, and above 97% for concentrations approaching 10 5 cm −3 . When subject to a step-fucntion change in input concentration the time required to attain 90% of the final value, including a 0.5 s lag, is 1.3 s. The corresponding exponential time constant is 0.35 s. The WCPC evaluated here is marketed as the TSI Model 3785.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Laminar-Flow, Water-Based Condensation Particle Counter (WCPC)Aerosol Science and Technology, 2005
- Fast Mixing Condensation Nucleus Counter: Application to Rapid Scanning Differential Mobility Analyzer MeasurementsAerosol Science and Technology, 2002
- The History of Condensation Nucleus CountersAerosol Science and Technology, 2000
- Analysis of biomolecules using electrospray and nanoparticle methods: the gas-phase electrophoretic mobility molecular analyzer (gemma)Journal of Aerosol Science, 1998
- Intercomparison Study of the Size-Dependent Counting Efficiency of 26 Condensation Particle CountersAerosol Science and Technology, 1997
- Asymmetric Instrument Response Resulting from Mixing Effects in Accelerated DMA-CPC MeasurementsAerosol Science and Technology, 1995
- Calibration of a TSI Model 3025 Ultrafine Condensation Particle CounterAerosol Science and Technology, 1991
- An Ultrafine Aerosol Condensation Nucleus CounterAerosol Science and Technology, 1991
- Development of a mixing type condensation nucleus counterJournal of Aerosol Science, 1982
- Continuous flow, single-particle-counting condensation nucleus counterJournal of Aerosol Science, 1980