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Removal of Elongated Particle Aggregates on Fibrous Filters
Author(s) -
Boskovic Lucija,
Altman Igor S.,
Braddock Roger D.,
Agranovski Igor E.
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
clean – soil, air, water
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.444
H-Index - 66
eISSN - 1863-0669
pISSN - 1863-0650
DOI - 10.1002/clen.200900175
Subject(s) - particle (ecology) , aerosol , agglomerate , filtration (mathematics) , materials science , particle size , perpendicular , diffusion , plane (geometry) , mechanics , geometry , molecular physics , composite material , chemistry , physics , mathematics , thermodynamics , statistics , meteorology , oceanography , geology
Abstract Elongated aerosol particle removal on fibrous filters has been investigated. It was shown that particle agglomerates are removed much more efficiently compared to the regularly shaped single particles with identical electrical mobility diameter at two filtration velocities tested. The experimental results were compared with the classical filtration theory and it was shown that the theoretical predictions, which are based on the assumption that the particles are spherical, are significantly different compared to an agglomerate filtration efficiency value. In order to account for a particle shape non‐regularity, dominating nanoparticle removal mechanisms were firstly evaluated for a regular particle of certain size and then adjusted by fitting coefficients k 1 (for diffusion component) and k 2 (for interception). These coefficients were determined by fitting the theoretical values that gives the best coincidence with the measured data points. As was further demonstrated theoretically, the coefficient k 1 is identical to the ratio of the actual particle surface area to the surface area of the spherical particle of the equivalent diameter. On the other hand, the coefficient k 2 was found to be equal to the ratio of the projection of a given particle on a plane perpendicular to a streamline, to that of the spherical particle of the equivalent diameter. The reported findings would allow undertaking more accurate evaluation of the removal efficiency of non‐regular aerosol particle, which is especially important for industrial applications where non‐regular aerosols are frequently met.