Experimental study of electrostatic aerosol filtration at moderate filter face velocity

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Abstract

Aerosol collection efficiency was studied for electrostatically charged fibrous filters (3M Filtrete™, BMF-20F). In this study, collection efficiencies at moderate filter face velocities (0.5-2.5 m/s) representative of some high volume sampling applications was characterized. Experimental data and analytical theories of filter performance are less common in this flow regime since the viscous flow field assumption may not be representative of actual flow through the filter mat. Additionally, electrostatic fiber charge density is difficult to quantify, and measurements of aerosol collection efficiency are often used to calculate this fundamental parameter. The purpose of this study was to assess the relative influence of diffusion, inertial impaction, interception, and electrostatic filtration on overall filter performance. The effects of fiber charge density were quantified by comparing efficiency data for charged and uncharged filter media, where an isopropanol bath was used to eliminate electrostatic charge. The effects of particle charge were also quantified by test aerosols brought into the equilibrium Boltzmann charge distribution, and then using an electrostatic precipitator to separate out only those test particles with a charge of zero. Electrostatically charged filter media had collection efficiencies as high as 70-85% at 30 nm. Filter performance was reduced significantly (40-50% collection efficiency) when the electrostatic filtration component was eliminated. Experiments performed with zero charged NaCl particles showed that a significant increase in filter performance is attributable to an induction effect, where electrostatic fiber charge polarizes aerosol particles without charge. As filter face velocity increased the electrostatic filtration efficiency decreased since aerosol particles had less time to drift toward electrostatically charged fibers. Finally, experimental data at 0.5 m/s were compared to theoretical predictions and good agreement was found for both electrostatic and nonelectrostatic effects. © 2013 American Association for Aerosol Research.

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Sanchez, A. L., Hubbard, J. A., Dellinger, J. G., & Servantes, B. L. (2013). Experimental study of electrostatic aerosol filtration at moderate filter face velocity. Aerosol Science and Technology, 47(6), 606–615. https://doi.org/10.1080/02786826.2013.778384

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