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Experimental study of electrostatic aerosol filtration at moderate filter face velocity

Aerosol Science and Technology

Sanchez, A.L.; Hubbard, Joshua A.; Dellinger, Jennifer D.; Servantes, B.L.

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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Fibrous filter efficiency and pressure drop in the viscous-inertial transition flow regime

Aerosol Science and Technology

Hubbard, Joshua A.; Brockmann, John E.; Dellinger, Jennifer D.; Lucero, Daniel A.; Sanchez, A.L.; Servantes, B.L.

Fibrous filter pressure drop and aerosol collection efficiency were measured at low air pressures (0.2-0.8 atm) and high face velocities (5-19 m/s) to give fiber Reynolds numbers lying in the viscous-inertial transition flow regime (1-15). In this regime, contemporary filtration theory based on Kuwabara's viscous flow through an ensemble of fibers underpredicts single fiber impaction by several orders of magnitude. Streamline curvature increases substantially as air stream inertial forces become significant. Dimensionless pressure drop measurements followed the viscous-inertial theory of Robinson and Franklin (1972) rather than Darcy's linear pressure-velocity relationship. Sodium chloride and iron nano-agglomerate aerosols were tested to provide a comparison between particles of dissimilar densities and shape factors. Total filter efficiency collapsed when plotted against the particle Stokes number and fiber Reynolds number. Efficiencies were then modeled with an impactor type equation where the cutpoint Stokes number and a steepness parameter described data well in the sharply increasing portion of the curve (20%-80% efficiency). A minimum in collection efficiency was observed at small Stokes numbers and attributed to interception and diffusive effects. The cutpoint Stokes number was a linearly decreasing function of fiber Reynolds number. Single fiber efficiencies were calculated from total filter efficiencies and compared to contemporary viscous flow impaction theory (Stechkina et al. 1969), and numerical simulations of single fiber efficiencies from the literature. Existing theories underpredicted measured single fiber efficiencies, although comparison is problematic. The assumption of uniform flow conditions for each successive layer of fibers is questionable; thus, the common exponential relationship between single fiber efficiency and total filter efficiency may not be appropriate in this regime. Copyright © American Association for Aerosol Research.

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Carbon fiber composite characterization in adverse thermal environments

Brown, Alexander B.; Dodd, Amanda B.; Gomez-Vasquez, Sylvia G.; Ramirez, Ciro J.; Hubbard, Joshua A.

The behavior of carbon fiber aircraft composites was studied in adverse thermal environments. The effects of resin composition and fiber orientation were measured in two test configurations: 102 by 127 millimeter (mm) test coupons were irradiated at approximately 22.5 kW/m{sup 2} to measure thermal response, and 102 by 254 mm test coupons were irradiated at approximately 30.7 kW/m{sup 2} to characterize piloted flame spread in the vertically upward direction. Carbon-fiber composite materials with epoxy and bismaleimide resins, and uni-directional and woven fiber orientations, were tested. Bismaleimide samples produced less smoke, and were more resistant to flame spread, as expected for high temperature thermoset resins with characteristically lower heat release rates. All materials lost approximately 20-25% of their mass regardless of resin type, fiber orientation, or test configuration. Woven fiber composites displayed localized smoke jetting whereas uni-directional composites developed cracks parallel to the fibers from which smoke and flames emanated. Swelling and delamination were observed with volumetric expansion on the order of 100% to 200%. The purpose of this work was to provide validation data for SNL's foundational thermal and combustion modeling capabilities.

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Computational modeling of composite material fires

Dodd, Amanda B.; Hubbard, Joshua A.; Erickson, Kenneth L.

Composite materials behave differently from conventional fuel sources and have the potential to smolder and burn for extended time periods. As the amount of composite materials on modern aircraft continues to increase, understanding the response of composites in fire environments becomes increasingly important. An effort is ongoing to enhance the capability to simulate composite material response in fires including the decomposition of the composite and the interaction with a fire. To adequately model composite material in a fire, two physical model development tasks are necessary; first, the decomposition model for the composite material and second, the interaction with a fire. A porous media approach for the decomposition model including a time dependent formulation with the effects of heat, mass, species, and momentum transfer of the porous solid and gas phase is being implemented in an engineering code, ARIA. ARIA is a Sandia National Laboratories multiphysics code including a range of capabilities such as incompressible Navier-Stokes equations, energy transport equations, species transport equations, non-Newtonian fluid rheology, linear elastic solid mechanics, and electro-statics. To simulate the fire, FUEGO, also a Sandia National Laboratories code, is coupled to ARIA. FUEGO represents the turbulent, buoyantly driven incompressible flow, heat transfer, mass transfer, and combustion. FUEGO and ARIA are uniquely able to solve this problem because they were designed using a common architecture (SIERRA) that enhances multiphysics coupling and both codes are capable of massively parallel calculations, enhancing performance. The decomposition reaction model is developed from small scale experimental data including thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) and Differential Scanning Calorimetry (DSC) in both nitrogen and air for a range of heating rates and from available data in the literature. The response of the composite material subject to a radiant heat flux boundary condition is examined to study the propagation of decomposition fronts of the epoxy and carbon fiber and their dependence on the ambient conditions such as oxygen concentration, surface flow velocity, and radiant heat flux. In addition to the computational effort, small scaled experimental efforts to attain adequate data used to validate model predictions is ongoing. The goal of this paper is to demonstrate the progress of the capability for a typical composite material and emphasize the path forward.

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Results 26–38 of 38
Results 26–38 of 38