Abstract

The charge distribution on ultrafine aerosol particles in the size range below 35 nm has been measured using a corona-based unipolar charger, in which ion generation and aerosol charging take place simultaneously in the region around a sharp-point discharge electrode. The mean number of charges per particle predicted by Fuchs’ diffusion charging theory is in relatively good agreement with the experimental results, and this implies that diffusion charging is the predominant mechanism in spite that the electric field in the charging region is very high. Since a steady state is unattainable in unipolar charging, the charge distribution depends on the geometry and operating conditions of each particular charger. When the present device operates under the conditions ( nt-product) which yield the maximum charging efficiency, double charge appears on particles with diameter as small as 15 nm. At larger values of nt, 32 nm particles can acquire up to five charges. The critical particle diameter above which multiple charging occurs is about four times smaller than for bipolar radioactive chargers. In order to use corona charging in aerosol particle size measurement by electrical methods, the required mobility data inversion is thus straightforward for particle diameter below about 15 nm, but becomes quite complex for larger sizes.

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