An in vitro study was conducted in the Alberta idealized child mouth-throat, which mimics average deposition in a set of nine 6-14-year-old subjects, to examine the enhancement of deposition of monodisperse uniformly charged particles as a result of induced electrostatic forces. A purpose-based atomizer was designed and built for generating monodisperse, uniformly charged particles. The atomizer generates droplets by jet break up under the action of capillary waves and charges them via electrostatic induction. The experiments cover different particle aerodynamic diameters (da = 3.6, 4.4, and 5.9 μm), at two flow rates (Q = 10 and 20 L/min), over a wide range of elementary charges per particle (0-10,000 e). The results show substantial increases in particle deposition in the present idealized pediatric mouth throat compared to neutral aerosols. Two empirical equations, as a function of Reynolds number, Stokes number, and induced charge number are introduced for the prediction of mouth-throat deposition in children, based on two different characteristic diameters of the airway. © American Association for Aerosol Research.
CITATION STYLE
Azhdarzadeh, M., Olfert, J. S., Vehring, R., & Finlay, W. H. (2014). Effect of induced charge on deposition of uniformly charged particles in a pediatric oral-extrathoracic airway. Aerosol Science and Technology, 48(5), 508–514. https://doi.org/10.1080/02786826.2014.896989
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