6533b820fe1ef96bd127909c

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Application of an O-ring pinch device as a constant-pressure inlet (CPI) for airborne sampling

Sergej MollekerOliver AppelOliver AppelFlorian RubachFlorian RubachFranziska KöllnerFrank HelleisAntonis DragoneasAntonis DragoneasThomas KlimachHans-christian ClemenAndreas HünigAndreas HünigJohannes SchneiderChristiane SchulzChristiane SchulzStephan BorrmannStephan BorrmannC. Gurk

subject

Atmospheric SciencegeographyMaterials sciencegeography.geographical_feature_category010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesAtmospheric pressurelcsh:TA715-787lcsh:Earthwork. Foundations010401 analytical chemistryMechanicsInlet01 natural sciencesPressure sensorlcsh:Environmental engineering0104 chemical sciencesAerosolMass flow rateAerosol mass spectrometryVacuum chamberlcsh:TA170-171Body orifice0105 earth and related environmental sciences

description

We present a novel and compact design of a constant-pressure inlet (CPI) developed for use in airborne aerosol mass spectrometry. In particular, the inlet system is optimized for aerodynamic lenses commonly used in aerosol mass spectrometers, in which efficient focusing of aerosol particles into a vacuum chamber requires a precisely controlled lens pressure, typically of a few hectopascals. The CPI device can also be used in condensation particle counters (CPCs), cloud condensation nucleus counters (CCNCs), and gas-phase sampling instruments across a wide range of altitudes and inlet pressures. The constant pressure is achieved by changing the inner diameter of a properly scaled O-ring that acts as a critical orifice. The CPI control keeps air pressure and thereby mass flow rate (≈0.1 L min−1) upstream of an aerodynamic lens constant, deviating at most by only ±2 % from a preset value. In our setup, a pressure sensor downstream of the O-ring maintains control of the pinch mechanism via a feedback loop and setpoint conditions are reached within seconds. The device was implemented in a few instruments, which were successfully operated on different research aircraft covering a wide range of ambient pressures, from sea level up to about 55 hPa. Details of operation and the quality of aerosol particle transmission were evaluated by laboratory experiments and in-flight data with a single-particle mass spectrometer.

https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-13-3651-2020