专利摘要:
The invention relates to a device for collecting nanoparticles that may be present in an aerosol. The invention consists in an electrostatic collection of the nanoparticles present in an aerosol, according to a charge mechanism by diffusion of unipolar ions then application of a field without a corona effect which makes it possible to perform their deposition according to concentric rings in different locations. a single plane substrate arranged orthogonally to the direction of circulation of the aerosol. The larger particles are deposited towards the center of the substrate-plane and the finer at the periphery. It also relates to a method of operation and the use of such a device for evaluating workers or consumers with nanoparticles.
公开号:FR3039434A1
申请号:FR1557223
申请日:2015-07-28
公开日:2017-02-03
发明作者:Simon Clavaguera;Michel Pourprix
申请人:Commissariat a lEnergie Atomique CEA;Commissariat a lEnergie Atomique et aux Energies Alternatives CEA;
IPC主号:
专利说明:

DEVICE FOR COLLECTING PARTICLES CONTAINED IN AEROSOL WITH ELECTROMETERS FOR DETERMINING THE CONCENTRATION AND GRANULOMETRY OF NANOPARTICLES
Technical area
The present invention relates to the field of the collection and analysis of nanoparticles that may be present in suspension in an aerosol.
The present invention aims to allow a collection of nanoparticles in suspension in aerosols which is simultaneous but selective depending on their dimensions, the selectivity preferably aiming to collect by separating by size the nanoscale particles, and this in order to determine their concentration and their particle size.
By "nanoparticle" is meant the usual definition according to ISO TS / 27687: a nano-object whose three dimensions are at the nanoscale, ie a particle whose nominal diameter is less than About 100 nm.
Although described with reference to the collection of nanoparticles, the invention also makes it possible to treat the other larger particles downstream.
State of the art
Since the 1970s, the awareness of the environmental and health effects caused by aerosols has been at the origin of new technological developments to better assess the associated risks.
The field expanded rapidly in the 1980s to include the use of aerosols in high-tech production processes, and the control of aerosol contamination in ultra-clean atmospheres. Since the 1990s, research has intensified on the properties of ultrafine particles, i.e. those smaller than 100 nm, and on the effect of aerosols on the climate. The field is therefore very broad since it covers the field of industrial hygiene, control of air pollution, inhalation toxicology, physics and atmospheric chemistry, and contamination by radioactive aerosols in facilities or the environment.
More recently, the rapid growth of nanotechnology in various fields such as health, microelectronics, energy technologies or consumer products such as paints and cosmetics makes it essential to continue work on health and environmental impacts. these new materials to surround themselves with optimal safety conditions.
It is therefore necessary to develop methods and tools for assessing exposure to particles, including nanoparticles, workers, consumers and the environment.
The development of methods and devices for sampling and analyzing aerosols in a wide range of particle sizes up to nanometric sizes is thus a crucial issue in terms of public health and the prevention of associated risks.
In particular, the development of sampling devices adapted to be portable and to be attached to the unit to a combination of work of a worker in the nano-objects manufacturing, nanomaterials production or use of nanomaterials could be imperative.
To collect and collect particles suspended in aerosols, for analysis in situ or in the laboratory, many devices exist. They can implement a collection by filtration on fibers or on porous membranes, a collection by diffusion for the finest particles, a collection under the effect of a field of forces of inertia (impactors, cyclones, centrifuges) or of gravity (sedimentation chambers, elutriators) for larger particles, or a collection under the effect of a field of electrical, thermal or radiative forces.
Among these devices, those electrostatic, that is to say whose operating principle is based on the implementation of an electric field, in particular an intense electric field to create a corona discharge effect (in English " corona discharge ") are commonly used.
When an intense electric field is generated in a volume where aerosol particles are present, these can be electrically charged according to two distinct charge mechanisms and this can occur concomitantly.
Publication [1], particularly Figure 15.4 on page 330 of this book, shows that the unipolar ion diffusion electric charge mechanism associated with the field charge mechanism is applicable to a wide range of sizes. of particles, at least for particles with dimensions of between 0.01 and 10 μm. It also appears that the mechanism of unipolar ion diffusion electric charge is especially predominant for the finest particles, typically nanoparticles, that is to say those of dimensions less than 100 nm. On the other hand, the field charge mechanism is more efficient for large particles, ie micron and sub-micron size particles (> 300 nm).
The unipolar ion diffusion charging mechanism therefore applies predominantly to the finest particles. This mechanism is increasingly used in the metrology of nanoparticles, in particular to determine their particle size. In fact, many authors have studied and are still studying devices capable of conferring high electrical mobilities on the finest particles, in order to be able to select them in instruments adapted to this new domain. One can cite here in particular the article [2] which makes an inventory of most of the technologies developed to date, or the principle developed by the author of the publication [3], which uses a thread configuration. cylinder, much studied more recently as indicated in the publication [4], but also before (publication [5]).
FIG. 1 schematically reproduces a charging device, also known as a charger, for unipolar ion diffusion whose geometry is of the wire-cylinder type, as illustrated in the publication [4]. The charger 10 comprises a two-part symmetrical body of revolution 1 which holds a hollow metal cylinder 11 forming an external electrode connected to an AC power supply and a central wire 12 arranged along the axis of the body and connected to a power supply. high voltage not shown. Around the central wire 12 is also annularly arranged a cylindrical grid 14 forming an inner electrode. The aerosol containing the particles to be charged flows in the charger 10 from the inlet orifice 17 to the outlet orifice 18 by passing through the space delimited between the inner electrode 14 formed by the gate and the outer electrode 11 formed by the cylinder.
The operation of this charger 10 is as follows: ions are produced by corona effect at the central wire 12 and are collected by the inner mesh electrode 14 brought to a low potential, typically grounded. Part of these ions out of this gate 14 to go to the inner surface of the peripheral cylinder 11 due to the voltage applied to the latter. The aerosol particles pass through the space between grid 14 and cylinder 11 and are therefore diffusion-loaded by the unipolar ions coming out of gate 14. The diffusion charging mechanism operates according to product N * t, where N represents the concentration of unipolar ions and t the residence time of the particles. The diffusion charging mechanism is the only one that can occur because there can be no field charge mechanism since the electric field is very small in space 15.
It is interesting to note that the unipolar ion diffusion aerosol loading process makes it possible to confer a given number of electric charges on a particle of a given size.
Thus, the sorting, or in other words the selection of the particles, can take place according to their electric mobility, that is to say according to their size.
This principle is also implemented in a differential electric mobility analyzer (DMA) which is an instrument capable of providing the particle size distribution of fine particles by counting the particle concentration in a given class of electric mobility. Counting can be done by a Condensation Particle Counter (CPC), which is the most conventional method.
A DMA coupled to a CPC is an instrument commonly known as the Electrical Mobility Spectrometer (SMPS). SMPS is already widely marketed by companies such as PALAS, GRIMM, or TSI. The operating principle of such an instrument is therefore as follows: - vary the high voltage on the electrode of the DMA, that is to say by performing a scanning ("scanning"), - analyze the CPC response for each voltage value obtained, by signal processing by applying a deconvolution in order to go back to the particle size spectrum of the incident particles knowing the law of charge of these particles. It should be noted that this instrument can only function correctly if the concentration of the incident particles is sufficiently stable upstream during the entire duration of the scanning. It is possible to reduce the weight and bulk of such devices to make them portable and autonomous, such as the instrument marketed by TSI under the name "NanoScan-SMPS Model 3910".
In some configurations, a CPC may be replaced by an electrometer connected to a Faraday cut. This makes it possible to measure very low electric currents of the order of 1 femto-ampere (fA). The electric current i detected by the electrometer is proportional to the concentration of particles N carrying an electric charge according to the relation: i = Q * N * e, where e is the elementary charge (1.6.1019 C) and Q the volumetric flow rate particles from the DMA and entering the Faraday cup. For example, the instrument marketed by TSI under the name "NanoScan-SMPS Model 3068B" implements such a device.
More integrated devices have developed by arranging, within an axial flow DMA, several collection electrodes arranged downstream of each other and each connected to an electrometer, which makes it possible to operate with a constant high voltage. on the internal electrode, and thus without scanning, and thus allows the measurement of particle concentrations that can vary rapidly. The instrument marketed by TSI under the name "NanoScan-SMPS Model 3090" implements such a device. Other devices with electrometers detection have recently been proposed with the aim first of all to offer miniaturization.
Thus, US Pat. No. 7549318 B2 discloses a device in which the particles are first electrically charged by diffusion of unipolar ions and then collected, the current measured by three electrometers one after the other, the last of which is connected to a section of faraday, to determine the concentration and average particle diameter.
Another device is implemented in US Patent 8044350 B2. This patent discloses a device in which the particles are first electrically charged by a unipolar ion diffusion charger and then selected in a disk-shaped electrostatic precipitator arranged downstream of the charger, by varying the applied high voltage. that is, by performing a scanning scan. The current measured by an electrometer connected to the precipitator makes it possible to determine the concentration and particle size of the particles.
It emerges from the study of the state of the art that it has not been proposed to simultaneously collect nanoparticles present in an aerosol and which are of different sizes, and to separate them according to ranges of dimensions, and this in order to allow their subsequent analysis to know their concentration, their physicochemical composition and / or their morphology according to their range of dimensions.
Indeed, on the one hand by definition the DMA instruments coupled to CPCs mentioned above, do not realize the deposition of the sorted particles which can not therefore be the subject of a physico-chemical analysis, and other Those with an electrometer (s) are not designed with collection areas for subsequent physico-chemical analysis of the collected nanoparticles and furthermore with a geometry suitable for portable use.
There is therefore a need for a device that simultaneously makes it possible to simultaneously collect nanoparticles present in an aerosol and that are of different sizes, and to separate them according to size ranges, in particular in order to allow the subsequent analysis of the nanoparticles collected and separated to know their concentration and their chemical composition sequentially according to their size range.
The general object of the invention is then to respond at least in part to this need.
Presentation of the invention
To do this, the invention firstly relates to a device for collecting nanoparticles that may be present in an aerosol, comprising: a conduit in the form of a hollow cylinder of revolution about a longitudinal axis (X), the conduit comprising an inlet port and an outlet port between which the aerosol can circulate; suction means for circulating the aerosol from the inlet orifice to the outlet orifice; downstream of the input port, a unipolar ion diffusion charger comprising an electrode in the form of a wire which extends along the axis (X) and surrounded by an electrode in the form of a gate, the charger being adapted to charge the nanoparticles in the space separating the gate of a conductive portion of the inner wall of the conduit, by diffusion of unipolar ions through the gate; downstream of the diffusion charger, an electrode called a field electrode in the form of a circular plate which extends orthogonally to the axis X, and at least one plane substrate parallel to the field electrode pierced in its central part by an opening opening, and comprising different concentric rings around the opening opening, individually connected to at least one electrometer; the potential difference applied between the field electrode and the substrate being adapted to generate, without a corona effect, an electric field in the space separating them and thus, on the one hand, to pass through the opening opening the particles of dimension Beyond the nanoparticles and secondly collect the nanoparticles, previously loaded by the diffusion charger, by depositing on a collection area of the substrate-plane defined by the different rings.
Thus, the invention consists in an electrostatic collection of the nanoparticles present in an aerosol, according to a charge mechanism by diffusion of unipolar ions then application of a field without a corona effect which makes it possible to deposit them in concentric rings in different locations of a single plane substrate arranged orthogonal to the direction of circulation of the aerosol. The larger particles are deposited towards the center of the substrate-plane and the finer at the periphery.
The particles present in the aerosol of dimensions greater than the nanoparticles are extracted through the opening opening in the center of the substrate-plane.
The electrometers individually connected to the concentric rings of the substrate-collector plane make it possible to obtain, by a deconvolution processing of electrical signals, the concentration and the particle size of the nanoparticles deposited therein.
The substrate-plane on which the deposition of the nanoparticles is carried out is removably mounted. After a given sampling time, the deposited nanoparticles can then be analyzed by conventional techniques of physical or physico-chemical characterization, such as optical or electronic microscopy, surface scanner, X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy (XRF for "X-Ray Fluoresence"). ), micro-fluorescence X (μ-XRF), laser-induced plasma spectroscopy (LIBS for Laser-Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy) ...
Among these analysis techniques, those with spatial resolution are particularly suitable for analyzing the substrate (s) for collecting the device according to the invention. In particular, the techniques of μ-XRF, LIBS or μ-LIBS appear as the methods of choice to determine the chemical composition of the nanoparticles collected according to concentric rings.
As discussed above, the weakest mass nanoparticles will be distributed over a larger circumference than the larger ones contributing significantly more to the mass. This has the direct consequence of a surface density in species of very different interest from the center to the periphery. At first glance, one skilled in the art could perceive this observation as a technical difficulty to be overcome for the application of spatial resolution analysis techniques such as LIBS, the resolution of which goes up to values of the order of 100 pm. However, the inventors have demonstrated that a technique of LIBS can sum the spectra for the same class of nanoparticles, size class in this case, to improve the signal-to-noise ratio especially as the circumference is large. . Thus, the device according to the invention would make it possible to recover quantitative information on the chemical composition of the nanoparticles despite the strong surface density gradient existing between the center of the substrate-collection plane and its periphery.
The number of concentric rings connected to electrometers depends on the precision required to determine the particle size distribution of the nanoparticles.
A number of concentric rings may be sufficient for the intended applications, particularly for the knowledge of the particle size distribution of nanoparticles that can be inhaled by operators on their workstations. Intrinsically, the analysis technique is no obstacle since a standard LIBS analysis with resolutions of 100 pm could distinguish up to a hundred concentric rings. On the other hand, the electronics associated with the measurement of very low currents in the device according to the invention is dimensioning for the development of a portable device. Also, a number of four rings seems to be a good compromise.
A collection device according to the invention is particularly well suited for the sampling of nanoparticles in gaseous media, especially the air of premises or the environment in order to know the concentration, the particle size, the chemical composition and / or the morphology of aerosol nanoparticles that can be inhaled.
The collection device according to the invention may constitute a detector with an alarm function in real time, in case of exceeding a predetermined threshold.
The device according to the present invention thus makes it possible to evaluate the individual exposure of operators in their workplaces where manufactured nanoparticles are released with a real-time monitoring of the signal of the number of nanoparticles, a posteriori of their chemical composition for their to free from other particles incidentally present in the aerosol and furthermore by sorting the nanoparticles collected on the substrate according to their size in order to be able to distinguish, at least in part, the most relevant fractions from the health and regulatory standpoints.
According to an advantageous embodiment, the device further comprises a system adapted to allow the lining of the aerosol flow, flowing in the space separating the grid from the inner wall of the duct, between two laminar streams of filtered air.
Downstream of the opening opening of the collection substrate, the device according to the invention may advantageously comprise: a filter, preferably in the form of a filtering membrane, adapted to retain particles having passed the opening opening, the filter capable of being connected to an electrometer; - an element consisting of a disc supporting a tip connected to a high voltage power supply to create a corona discharge, so as to collect on the underside of the substrate the particles having passed the opening opening, via an electric field imposed collection between the substrate and the disc; - A hatch in the form of a disk pierced with a blind hole interposed below the opening, so as to collect by inertial impaction a portion of the particles, according to a given size range, having passed the opening opening.
With the hatch, several variants can be provided.
Thus, according to a first variant, the lips of the blind hole are in the form of a multitude of circularly arranged tips or of a blade with a sharp edge, the disk being connected to a high voltage power supply to create a corona discharge in the space between the underside of the substrate and the lips of the blind hole so as to collect, in a given size range, only a part of the particles, having passed the opening opening, preferably particles of dimension between 0.1 and 4 pm.
The suction means may be constituted by a pump or a fan.
Alternatively, the suction means may be constituted at least in part by plasma actuators.
One or more of the advantageous characteristics can be provided as follows: the field electrode is connected to a high-voltage power supply, preferably between 2 and 6kV; the gate is connected to a low voltage supply, preferably of the order of 100V; the planar substrate is connected to the zero potential. The subject of the invention is also a method for operating a collection device described above, comprising a step of transmitting an alarm if a predetermined threshold value measured using the connected electrometers is exceeded. concentric rings integrated in the collection substrate. Finally, another object of the invention is to use a device that has just been described, either to collect while classifying nanoparticles of different sizes, or to evaluate the individual exposure of workers or consumers to the nanoparticles or to determine a particle size distribution of an aerosol containing a nanoparticulate fraction.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION Other advantages and features will emerge more clearly on reading the detailed description, given by way of illustration and without limitation, with reference to the following figures among which: FIG. 1 is a longitudinal sectional view of a charging device , or unipolar ion diffusion charger; FIG. 2 is a diagrammatic view in longitudinal section of an example of a device for collecting nanoparticles according to the invention; FIG. 3 is a diagrammatic view in longitudinal section of a first variant of the device according to FIG. 2; FIG. 4 is a schematic view in longitudinal section of an advantageous embodiment of the device according to FIG. 2; FIG. 5 is a diagrammatic view in longitudinal section of an alternative to the advantageous embodiment of the device according to FIG. 4; FIG. 6 is a diagrammatic view in longitudinal section of another alternative to the advantageous embodiment of the device according to FIG. 4; FIG. 7 is a view derived from the simulation by the finite element calculation software for determining the particle velocity profiles of 1 μm carrying 50 elementary charges and their trajectories in a device according to the invention as illustrated in FIG. ; FIG. 8 is a view derived from the simulation by the finite element calculation software for determining the particle speed profiles of 100 nm carrying 4 elementary charges as well as their trajectories in a device according to the invention as illustrated in FIG. 3 ; FIG. 9 is a view derived from the simulation by the finite element calculation software for determining the particle charge profiles of 10 nm carrying 1 elementary charge and their trajectories in a device according to the invention as illustrated in FIG. 3 .
Throughout the present application, the terms "vertical", "lower", "upper", "lower", "high", "below", "above", "height" are to be understood by reference to a collection device arranged vertically with the inlet port at the top.
Similarly, the terms "inlet", "outlet", "upstream" and "downstream" are to be understood by reference with respect to the direction of the suction flow through a collection device according to the invention. Thus, the inlet port refers to the orifice of the device by which the aerosol containing the particles is sucked while the outlet means the one through which the air flow exits.
Figure 1 has already been commented on in the preamble. It is therefore not detailed below.
For the sake of clarity, the same elements of the collection devices according to the state of the art and according to the illustrated examples of the invention are designated by the same reference numerals.
FIG. 2 shows an example of an electrostatic device 1 according to the invention for the selective collection of nanoparticles that may be contained in an aerosol.
Such a device according to the invention makes it possible to collect the nanoparticles and to separate them according to size ranges.
The collection device 1 comprises firstly a conduit 11 which is a hollow cylinder of revolution about the longitudinal axis X and which is electrically connected to the zero potential.
The collection device 1 comprises inside the duct 11, from upstream to downstream, between its inlet orifice 17 and its outlet orifice 18, essentially two distinct stages and arranged one immediately downstream of the inlet. other 20.
The first stage consists of a unipolar ion diffusion charger 10, and is similar to that previously described in connection with FIG.
The charger 10 thus comprises a central electrode which extends along the X axis in the form of a wire 12 connected to a power supply delivering a high voltage, adapted to thereby create a corona discharge in the vicinity of the wire 12. Also includes a peripheral electrode in the form of a gate 14 connected to a low voltage supply.
The charger 10 is adapted to charge the nanoparticles in the space 15 separating the gate 14 from the inner wall of the conduit 11, by diffusion of unipolar ions through the gate. The stage 20, downstream of the charger 10, comprises a central field electrode 22 in the form of a solid disk which extends orthogonally to the axis (X) connected to a power supply delivering a high voltage and a substrate. plane 24 arranged parallel to the field electrode by defining a space 21.
Advantageously, a single high-voltage supply makes it possible both to produce the corona effect in the vicinity of the wire 12 and to supply the field electrode 22. The high voltage is chosen preferably between 2 and 6 kV, more preferably at about 4 kV.
The planar substrate 24 is electrically connected to the zero potential and pierced in its central part by a through opening 240, and comprises different concentric rings around the opening opening, individually connected to a not shown electrometer. The planar substrate 24 is preferably conductive, typically of metal, or semiconductor. Its diameter is preferably between 10 and 25 mm, more preferably of the order of 20 mm.
The operation of the collection device which has just been described with reference to FIG. 2 is as follows. The air containing the particles to be collected is sucked by the inlet orifice 17 by the action of suction means not shown. Π is uniformly distributed in a cylindrical volume inside the conduit 11.
The nanoparticles of the aerosol are electrically charged by diffusion of unipolar ions in the space 15 separating the gate 14 from the conduit 11.
These nanoparticles, with high electric mobility, and the other larger particles with lower electric mobility, penetrate the stage 20.
The electric field without corona effect created in the space 24 by the potential difference applied between the field electrode 22 and the substrate 24 ensures the collection of particles nanoparticles previously loaded by the diffusion diffusion charger on the latter. More precisely, the thinnest nanoparticles, with greater electrical mobility, are precipitated towards the periphery of the substrate-plane, that is to say on the peripheral rings, the larger nanoparticles towards the center of the substrate-plane, c 'ie on the rings near the opening 240 opening.
The particles of dimension greater than the nanoparticles as for them are not collected by the substrate 24 but extracted through the opening 240 in the direction of the outlet orifice 18. In fact, the operating parameters of the device according to the invention are calculated in such a way that all the nanoscale particles, ie less than 100 nm in size, are deposited on the planar substrate 24. In other words, all the particles larger than 100 nm are discharged through the opening 240. illustrative, a substrate-plane 24 of 2 cm in diameter, with a space 21 of 4 mm with respect to the electrode 22, which would be brought to a potential of 4 kV, makes it possible to collect all the nanoparticles at a flow rate of aerosol of 2 l / min.
Signal processing by deconvolution of the signals from the electrometers each connected to one of the concentric rings 25 makes it possible to obtain the concentration and the particle size of the nanoparticles deposited on all the rings.
Subsequently, the substrate 24 can be removed from the device 1 according to the invention in order to determine the chemical composition and / or the morphology of the nanoparticles collected according to the concentric rings 25.
A laser-induced plasma spectroscopy analysis LIBS is particularly advantageous despite the high density gradient of deposited nanoparticles which can exist between the center of the substrate and its periphery.
As illustrated in FIGS. 2 to 5, the number of concentric rings is equal to four. The inventors consider that this number is a good compromise between the possible high resolution of the LIBS which would make it possible to distinguish all the concentric rings and the possible dimensioning of the electronics associated with the measurement of very low currents so as to make the device according to the invention that is portable.
FIG. 3 shows an advantageous variant of the device 1 according to the invention. According to this variant, there is provided a system 30 for lining the aerosol flow between two laminar streams of filtered air. The filtered air may advantageously be that at the outlet of the outlet orifice 18 which has also been purified of particles larger than the nanoparticles collected on the substrate 24.
Thus, this flow liner stage 30 comprises a filtered air supply port 31 connected downstream to a distributor 32.
As shown in FIG. 3, the filtered air introduced from the orifice 31 feeds the distributor 32 which generates two concentric filtered air flow streams, one against the inner wall of the cylindrical duct 11 and the other against the outer wall (Grid 14) of the charger 10. Thus, as symbolized by the points, the flow of the aerosol containing the charged nanoparticles is lined between the two laminar flow of filtered air. This makes it possible to increase the resolution of the granulometric selection of the nanoparticles.
It should be noted that in this FIG. 3, no electric field is applied between the electrode 22 and the substrate 24.
The lining of the aerosol as shown in FIG. 3 also offers the best operating conditions of the charger 10 since the residence time of the particles in the ionized space 15 is particularly well controlled in this type of flow (publication [4]). ]).
In practice, the filtered air flow entering through the orifice 31 may advantageously be chosen to be of the same order of magnitude as the aerosol flow rate entering through the orifice 17, which generally gives a dilution of a factor of 2.
According to an advantageous embodiment, the device 1 can be produced so as to collect all the particles, even the largest ones, ie those of dimensions greater than 100 nm which would not have previously deposited on the substrate-plane 24 because of 'electric mobility too low.
Such a mode is illustrated in FIG. 4: a filter 40 advantageously in the form of a plane filter, as a filter membrane is interposed in the conduit 11 downstream of the opening opening 240. This filter 40 is connected to an additional electrometer not shown and it is maintained by an insulating support 41. Thus, it is possible to know in real time, the ratio between nanoparticles and particles larger than 100 nm in the aerosol.
The filter 40 may itself be analyzed a posteriori to determine the chemical composition of particles larger than 100 nm, and possibly their particle size by image analysis.
An alternative to the mode of Figure 4 is shown in Figure 5.
Instead of a filter 40, it is possible to implement an electrostatic trap 40 '.
This electrostatic trap may consist of a disc 41 supporting a tip 42 connected to a high voltage power supply to create a corona discharge. The tip 42 extends along the X axis immediately downstream of the opening 240. The disc 41 can be advantageously brought to the same potential as the tip 42.
With this configuration, particles greater than 100 nm in size through aperture 240 are electrically charged into gap 43 above tip 41 and through the intense field created by the tip.
The particles thus charged are then precipitated on the lower face 241 of the substrate 24, via a collection electric field imposed between the substrate 24 and the disc 41 carried, for example, at the same potential as the tip. The essential advantage of the device illustrated in FIG. 5 is that the two faces of the substrate 24 can be exploited for the analysis: the upper face 242 for the analysis of the nanoparticles, the lower face 241 for the analysis of the larger particles at 100 nm.
FIG. 6 illustrates another variant of the collection device according to FIG.
To collect only a portion of the particles larger than 100 nm present in the aerosol, there is provided a hatch 50 in the form of a disk pierced with a blind hole 51 interposed below the opening 240 to leave pass only the alveolar fraction of the particles.
The hatch 50 is carried at high tension in order to create a crown effect between the lips 52 advantageously of tapered shape of the blind hole 51 and the lower face 241 of the substrate 24.
Thus, particles having a size of between 100 nm and the aerodynamic diameter of cut are collected. As an indication, to have an aerodynamic cut-off diameter at 4 μm at a flow rate of 1 1 / min, the diameter of the blind hole 51 is of the order of 2 mm.
The particles extracted from the hatch 50, with a particle size advantageously between 0.1 μm and 4 μm, load in the space 53 separating the hatch 50 from the substrate 24 according to a charge mechanism per field and are finally collected on the lower face. 241 of the substrate 24.
As already mentioned, the flow of the aerosol within the device 1 according to the invention can be established by a fan.
In particular to avoid noise and vibrations, this fan can advantageously be replaced by one or more plasma actuators such as those shown implanted inside the hatch 50. These plasma actuators may be of the type described in US Pat. No. 6,200,539. B1 and US 8348626 B2.
The inventors simulated the operation of the collection device according to the invention as illustrated in FIGS. 2 to 6 using a finite element calculation software marketed under the name "COMSOL Multiphysics".
The collection device 1 with the same geometry as that shown in FIG. 3 can be studied under the finite element calculation software COMSOL by looking at the flows, the electric fields and the particle trajectories.
FIGS. 7, 8 and 9 are views derived from the simulation by the software for determining the particle velocity profiles, as well as the trajectories of the particles in a device according to the invention as illustrated in FIG.
The test conditions for each of these FIGS. 7 to 9 are the following: the main aerosol flow rate is 0.5 L / min, the filtered air flow rate participating in the lining of the main aerosol flow is 1 L / min, the distance between the plane 22 and the plane 24) is 4 mm; the potential applied to plane 22 is 4 kV.
In the simulation tests, the filtered air is introduced to line the main aerosol flow into the collection space 21. A first layer of filtered air has been introduced at the outer edge of the electrode 22 and a second, at the outer edge of the collection surface 24. Thus, the flow of the aerosol containing the charged particles is lined between the two laminar streams of filtered air.
From FIGS. 7 to 9, realized by the finite element calculation software "COMSOL Multiphysics", it can be seen that: the micron particles all pass through the orifice 240; a large part of the particles of 100 nm are collected and a small portion passes through the orifice 240, which clearly demonstrates the cutoff threshold of the device 1 at approximately 100 nm; the nanoparticles 10 nm in diameter are collected on the outer periphery of the collection disc 24 in the form of a ring.
Thus, the collection device 1 according to the invention as shown in FIGS. 2 to 6 makes it possible to collect, by deposition on the same support, for example a metal disc, nanoparticles of different dimensions, on concentric rings corresponding to well-defined particle sizes. .
In addition, additional means can be provided to collect, downstream of the collector substrate of the nanoparticles, particles of size greater than 100 nm, typically micron-size particles.
The support can then be extracted from the rest of the collection device and then analyzed by conventional techniques of physical or physico-chemical characterization (optical or electronic microscopy, surface scanner, X-ray fluorescence, laser-induced plasma spectroscopy LIBS ....
The collection device according to the invention is particularly well suited for the sampling of nanoparticles in gaseous media, in particular the air of the premises or the environment in order to know the concentration, the particle size, the chemical composition and / or the morphology of the aerosol particles likely to be inhaled ... Because of its small size and its reduced power consumption, this device could be portable and therefore deployable on a large scale for a moderate cost. Other variants and improvements can be made without departing from the scope of the invention. The invention is not limited to the examples which have just been described; it is possible in particular to combine with one another characteristics of the illustrated examples within non-illustrated variants. References cited [1]: W. Hinds, "Aerosol Technology", 2nd Edition, 1999.
[2]: P. Intra and N. Tippayawong, "Aerosol an Air Quality Research", 11: 187-209, 2011; [3]: G.W. Hewitt, "The Charging of Small Particles for Electrostatic Precipitation," ATFF, Trans., 76: 300-306, 1957; [4]: G. Biskos, K. Reavell, N. Collings, "Electrostatic Characterization of Corona-Wire Aerosol Chargers", J. Electrostat. 63: 69-82, 2005; [5]: D.Y.H. Pui, S. Fruin, P. H. McMurry, "Unipolar Diffusion Charging of Ultrafine Aerosols", Aerosol Science Technology 8: 173-187, 1988;
权利要求:
Claims (16)
[1" id="c-fr-0001]
1. Device for collecting (1) nanoparticles that may be present in an aerosol, comprising: - a conduit (11) in the form of a hollow cylinder of revolution about a longitudinal axis (X), the conduit comprising an inlet (17) and an outlet (18) between which the aerosol can circulate; - suction means (18, 54) for circulating the aerosol from the inlet port to the outlet port; downstream of the input port, a unipolar ion diffusion charger (10) comprising an electrode in the form of a wire (12) which extends along the (X) axis and is surrounded by by an electrode in the form of a gate (14), the charger being adapted to charge the nanoparticles in the space (15) separating the gate from a conductive portion of the inner wall of the conduit, by diffusion of unipolar ions to through the grid; downstream of the diffusion charger, an electrode (22) called a field electrode in the form of a circular plate which extends orthogonally to the axis (X), and at least one parallel planar substrate (24) at the field electrode, pierced in its central part by an opening opening (240), and comprising different rings (25) concentric around the opening opening, individually connected to at least one electrometer; the potential difference applied between the field electrode and the substrate being adapted to generate, without a corona effect, an electric field in the space (21) separating them and thus, on the one hand, to pass through the opening opening the particles of dimension beyond the nanoparticles and secondly collect the nanoparticles, previously loaded by the diffusion charger, by depositing on a collection area of the substrate-plane defined by the different rings.
[2" id="c-fr-0002]
2. A collection device according to claim 1, further comprising a system (30) adapted to allow the lining of the aerosol flow, flowing in the space separating the grid from the inner wall of the duct, between two laminar flows of filtered air.
[3" id="c-fr-0003]
3. A collection device according to claim 1 or 2, further comprising, downstream of the opening opening (240) of the collection substrate (24), a filter (40), preferably in the form of a filter membrane. , adapted to retain the particles having passed the opening opening, the filter (40) being connectable to an electrometer.
[4" id="c-fr-0004]
A collection device according to claim 1 or 2, comprising, downstream of the through opening (240) of the collection substrate (24), an element (40 ') consisting of a disk (41) supporting a tip (42). ) connected to a high-voltage power supply to create a corona discharge, so as to collect on the underside (241) of the substrate (24) the particles having passed the opening opening, via an imposed electric field of collection between the substrate (24) and the disc (41).
[5" id="c-fr-0005]
5. A collection device according to claim 1 or 2, comprising, downstream of the opening opening (240) of the collection substrate (24), a hatch (50) in the form of a disk pierced with a blind hole (51) interposed below the opening (240), so as to collect by inertial impaction a portion of the particles, in a given size range, having passed the opening opening.
[6" id="c-fr-0006]
6. A collection device according to claim 5, the lips (52) of the blind hole (51) being in the form of a tip, the disk being connected to a high voltage power supply to create a corona discharge in the space (53). ) between the underside (241) of the substrate (24) and the lips (52) of the blind hole (51) so as to collect, in a given size range, only a portion of the particles, having passed the opening opening, preferably particles having a size of between 0.1 and 4 μm.
[7" id="c-fr-0007]
A collection device according to claim 5, comprising an additional element, such as a blade or wire in the form of a tip, the disc being connected to a high voltage power supply to create a corona discharge in the space ( 53) between the lower face (241) or the upper face (242) of the substrate (24) and the additional element so as to collect, in a given size range, only a portion of the particles having passed the opening opening, preferably particles having a size of between 0.1 and 4 μm.
[8" id="c-fr-0008]
8. The collection device according to one of the preceding claims, the suction means being constituted by a pump or a fan.
[9" id="c-fr-0009]
9. The collection device according to one of claims 1 to 7, the suction means being constituted at least in part by plasma actuators (54).
[10" id="c-fr-0010]
10. The collection device according to one of the preceding claims, the field electrode (21) being connected to a high voltage power supply, preferably between 2 and 6kV.
[11" id="c-fr-0011]
11. The collection device according to one of the preceding claims, the gate (14) being connected to a low voltage supply, preferably of the order of 100V.
[12" id="c-fr-0012]
12. Collecting device according to one of the preceding claims, the planar substrate (24) being connected to the zero potential.
[13" id="c-fr-0013]
13. A method of operating a collection device according to one of the preceding claims, comprising a step of issuing an alarm when exceeding a predetermined threshold value measured with the electrometers or electrometers connected to them. concentric rings (25) integrated with the collection substrate (24).
[14" id="c-fr-0014]
14. Use of a device according to one of claims 1 to 12 to collect while classifying nanoparticles of different sizes.
[15" id="c-fr-0015]
15. Use of a device according to one of claims 1 to 12 for evaluating the individual exposure of workers or consumers to nanoparticles.
[16" id="c-fr-0016]
16. Use of a device according to one of claims 1 to 12 for determining a particle size distribution of an aerosol containing a nanoparticulate fraction.
类似技术:
公开号 | 公开日 | 专利标题
EP3328547B1|2019-10-23|Device for collecting particles contained in an aerosol, comprising electrometres to determine nanoparticle concentration and particle size
EP3328548B1|2019-12-18|Selective aerosol particle collecting method and device, according to particle size
EP3328549B1|2019-09-25|Method for the selective purification of aerosols
US6807874B2|2004-10-26|Collecting apparatus of floating dusts in atmosphere
EP0404681A1|1990-12-27|Electrostatic aerosol detector
EP0128827B1|1987-09-09|Method and portable carrying-out device for detecting atmospheric contamination by means of alpha particle aerosols
EP0685727B1|2002-08-14|Particle spectrometer, especially for submicronic particles
Raveendran et al.2020|Portable surface-enhanced Raman scattering analysis performed with microelectrode-templated silver nanodendrites
FR2745086A1|1997-08-22|Aerosol charged particle selector
FR3071613B1|2019-10-18|APPARATUS FOR DETECTION AND REAL-TIME CHEMICAL IDENTIFICATION OF PARTICLES CONTAINED IN AEROSOLS, IN PARTICULAR IN ATMOSPHERIC AEROSOLS
EP3694649B1|2022-01-05|Sorting method and device for fibres suspended in an aerosol, using combined electrostatic and centrifugal forces
EP3694650B1|2021-12-01|Sorting method and device for fibres suspended in an aerosol, using a combination of electrostatic forces and gravity
KR101460311B1|2014-11-14|Apparatus for classifying particle
WO2017089371A1|2017-06-01|Method for characterising the porosity of a porous material by analysing an image obtained by scanning electron microscopy
EP0790495A1|1997-08-20|Dynamic mobility selector for aerosol-particles
EP3152543A1|2017-04-12|Device for picking and transporting nanoobjects contained in aerosols, with a cassette with a module suited to reducing the suction noise during picking
EP3909684A1|2021-11-17|Electrostatic precipitator/manifold with collection electrode| coated with one or more film| comprising an electrically conductive layer and an absorbent layer of particles and gas, associated set of peelable film|
FR3102375A1|2021-04-30|Particle separation device for additive manufacturing and additive manufacturing apparatus
JP2009264980A|2009-11-12|Method and apparatus for analyzing particulate
Greenaway et al.2004|Single-Particle Raman Spectrometer | for the non-destructive physico-chemical characterisation of aerosols
同族专利:
公开号 | 公开日
US10675639B2|2020-06-09|
FR3039434B1|2018-02-16|
EP3328547A1|2018-06-06|
US20180200726A1|2018-07-19|
CN107921443A|2018-04-17|
CN107921443B|2020-03-20|
WO2017017183A1|2017-02-02|
EP3328547B1|2019-10-23|
引用文献:
公开号 | 申请日 | 公开日 | 申请人 | 专利标题
US5098657A|1989-08-07|1992-03-24|Tsi Incorporated|Apparatus for measuring impurity concentrations in a liquid|
US20030136205A1|2002-01-21|2003-07-24|Shimadzu Corporation|Collecting apparatus of floating dusts in atmosphere and method for measuring floating dusts|
US7549318B2|2005-01-13|2009-06-23|Matter Engineering|Method and device for the measurement of the number concentration and of the average diameter of aerosol particles|
US20100043527A1|2005-06-28|2010-02-25|Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V.|Ultra fine particle sensor|
EP2853882A1|2012-05-21|2015-04-01|Shimadzu Corporation|Particle count measurement device|
US20150040760A1|2013-08-09|2015-02-12|Ut-Battelle, Llc|Direct impact aerosol sampling by electrostatic precipitation|
AU3180099A|1998-01-08|1999-07-26|Government of the United States of America as represented by the Administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration , The|Paraelectric gas flow accelerator|
JP2004053357A|2002-07-18|2004-02-19|Shimadzu Corp|Collecting method and measuring method of yellow sand particle|
US8348626B2|2007-07-25|2013-01-08|University Of Florida Research Foundation, Inc.|Method and apparatus for efficient micropumping|
US8044350B2|2007-11-29|2011-10-25|Washington University|Miniaturized ultrafine particle sizer and monitor|
US8779382B1|2013-05-16|2014-07-15|National Chiao Tung University|Corona-wire unipolar aerosol charger|CN104812301B|2012-09-25|2018-02-09|吸入科学瑞典股份公司|exposure system|
CN108918358A|2018-07-17|2018-11-30|中煤科工集团重庆研究院有限公司|A kind of particle size distributed detection system and method based on DMA|
TWI695163B|2018-12-19|2020-06-01|財團法人工業技術研究院|Particulate matter sensing device|
CN109817100B|2019-03-15|2022-02-11|京东方科技集团股份有限公司|Narrow-frame and ultra-narrow-frame display device, display panel and manufacturing method thereof|
CN110237931B|2019-06-18|2020-07-21|嘉兴德基机械设计有限公司|Magnetoelectric combined type gas purifier and control method thereof|
法律状态:
2016-07-29| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 2 |
2017-02-03| PLSC| Search report ready|Effective date: 20170203 |
2017-06-30| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 3 |
2018-07-27| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 4 |
2019-07-31| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 5 |
2020-07-31| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 6 |
2021-07-29| PLFP| Fee payment|Year of fee payment: 7 |
优先权:
申请号 | 申请日 | 专利标题
FR1557223A|FR3039434B1|2015-07-28|2015-07-28|DEVICE FOR COLLECTING PARTICLES CONTAINED IN AEROSOL WITH ELECTROMETERS FOR DETERMINING THE CONCENTRATION AND GRANULOMETRY OF NANOPARTICLES|
FR1557223|2015-07-28|FR1557223A| FR3039434B1|2015-07-28|2015-07-28|DEVICE FOR COLLECTING PARTICLES CONTAINED IN AEROSOL WITH ELECTROMETERS FOR DETERMINING THE CONCENTRATION AND GRANULOMETRY OF NANOPARTICLES|
US15/744,291| US10675639B2|2015-07-28|2016-07-28|Device for collecting particles contained in an aerosol, comprising electrometres to determine nanoparticle concentration and particle size|
PCT/EP2016/068000| WO2017017183A1|2015-07-28|2016-07-28|Device for collecting particles contained in an aerosol, comprising electrometres to determine nanoparticle concentration and particle size|
EP16753836.2A| EP3328547B1|2015-07-28|2016-07-28|Device for collecting particles contained in an aerosol, comprising electrometres to determine nanoparticle concentration and particle size|
CN201680044295.XA| CN107921443B|2015-07-28|2016-07-28|Aerosol particle collecting device with nano particle concentration and particle size measuring device|
[返回顶部]