A new working fluid for condensation particle counters for use in sensitive working environments
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Published:2023-06-27
Issue:1
Volume:1
Page:1-12
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ISSN:2940-3391
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Container-title:Aerosol Research
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Aerosol Research
Author:
Weber PatrickORCID, Bischof Oliver F., Fischer Benedikt, Berg Marcel, Schmitt JannikORCID, Steiner GerhardORCID, Keck Lothar, Petzold AndreasORCID, Bundke UlrichORCID
Abstract
Abstract. The working fluid of a condensation particle counter
(CPC) is one of its essential characteristics. Butanol is commonly used as
the working fluid in alcohol-based CPCs due to its proven performance for
various applications and for a wide range of working conditions over the past almost 5 decades. At the same time, butanol has several disadvantages, including its strong and unpleasant odour, negative effects when inhaled over prolonged periods and flammability, making it troublesome to use in places with strict safety regulations. In this work, we propose addressing these negative issues by replacing butanol with dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), a substance that has not been used as a CPC working fluid to date. DMSO is an odourless, non-flammable and non-toxic substance that is easily accessible and
inexpensive. During thorough experiments, this new substitute working fluid
has proven to be stable with respect to its performance for CPCs and storage. We show that DMSO behaves in an equivalent manner to butanol when used to operate a CPC in terms of the instrument's counting efficiency, D50 cut-off diameter (the diameter at which 50 % of the particles are counted with respect to a reference) and
concentration linearity. In addition, we have demonstrated this for
operating pressures ranging from ambient pressure down to 200 hPa without the need
for any safety precautions. Our new working fluid was tested on three CPC
units representing two different models, almost always in side-by-side
measurements. So far, we have achieved the best results with operating
temperatures of 40 ∘C for the CPC's saturator and 5 ∘C
for its condenser. To address a less desirable property of DMSO, it could be mixed with a slight amount of water to decrease its freezing point
significantly. When mixed accordingly, the substance remains a liquid, even in work environments with temperatures ≤ −10 ∘C, without any impact on the CPC's counting efficiency performance.
Funder
Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung Forschungszentrum Jülich
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
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