Miniaturizing wet scrubbers for aerosolized droplet capture

Author:

Lee Ulri N.ORCID,van Neel Tammi L.ORCID,Lim Fang Yun,Khor Jian WeiORCID,He JiayangORCID,Vaddi Ravi S.ORCID,Ong Angelo Q.W.ORCID,Tang AnthonyORCID,Berthier Jean,Meschke John S.ORCID,Novosselov Igor V.ORCID,Theberge Ashleigh B.ORCID,Berthier ErwinORCID

Abstract

AbstractAerosols dispersed and transmitted through the air (e.g., particulate matter pollution, bioaerosols) are ubiquitous and one of the leading causes of adverse health effects and disease transmission. A variety of sampling methods (e.g., filters, cyclones, impactors) have been developed to assess personal exposures. However, a gap still remains in the accessibility and ease-of-use of these technologies for people without experience or training in collecting airborne samples. Additionally, wet scrubbers (large non-portable industrial systems) utilize liquid sprays to remove aerosols from the air; the goal is to “scrub” (i.e., clean) the exhaust of industrial smokestacks, not collect the aerosols for analysis. Inspired by wet scrubbers, we developed a device fundamentally different from existing portable air samplers by using aerosolized microdroplets to capture aerosols in personal spaces (e.g., homes, offices, schools). Our aerosol-sampling device is the size of a small teapot, can be operated without specialized training, and features a winding flow path in a supersaturated relative humidity environment enabling droplet growth. The integrated open mesofluidic channels shuttle coalesced droplets to a collection chamber for subsequent sample analysis. Here, we present the experimental demonstration of aerosol capture into water droplets. Iterative study optimized the non-linear flow manipulating baffles and enabled an 83% retention of the aerosolized microdroplets in the confined volume of our device. As a proof-of-concept for aerosol capture into a liquid medium, 0.5-3 µm model particles were used to evaluate aerosol capture efficiency. Finally, we demonstrate the device can capture and keep a bioaerosol (bacteriophage MS2) viable for downstream analysis.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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