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Featured researches published by Chaolong Qi.


Aerosol Science and Technology | 2013

Miniature Dual-Corona Ionizer for Bipolar Charging of Aerosol

Chaolong Qi; Pramod Kulkarni

A corona-based bipolar charger has been developed for use in compact, field-portable mobility size spectrometers. The charger employs an aerosol flow cavity exposed to two corona ionizers producing ions of opposite polarity. Each corona ionizer houses two electrodes in parallel needle-mesh configuration and is operated at the same magnitude of corona current. Experimental measurement of detailed charge distribution of near-monodisperse particles of different diameter in the submicrometer size range showed that the charger is capable of producing well-defined, consistent bipolar charge distributions for flow rates up to 1.5 L/min and aerosol concentration up to 107 per cm3. For particles with pre-existing charge of +1, 0, and −1, the measured charge distributions agreed well with the theoretical distributions within the range of experimental and theoretical uncertainties. The transmission efficiency of the charger was measured to be 80% for 10 nm particles (at 0.3 L/min and 5 μA corona current) and increased with increasing diameter beyond this size. Measurement of uncharged fractions at various combinations of positive and negative corona currents showed the charger performance to be insensitive to fluctuations in corona current. Ion concentrations under positive and negative unipolar operation were estimated to be 8.2 × 107 and 3.37 × 108 cm−3 for positive and negative ions; the n·t product value under positive corona operation was independently estimated to be 8.5 × 105 s/cm3. The ion concentration estimates indicate the charger to be capable of “neutralizing” typical atmospheric and industrial aerosols in most measurement applications. The miniature size, simple and robust operation makes the charger suitable for portable mobility spectrometers. Copyright 2013 American Association for Aerosol Research


Aerosol Science and Technology | 2016

Development of portable aerosol mobility spectrometer for personal and mobile aerosol measurement

Pramod Kulkarni; Chaolong Qi; Nobuhiko Fukushima

ABSTRACT We describe development of a portable aerosol mobility spectrometer (PAMS) for size distribution measurement of submicrometer aerosol. The spectrometer is designed for use in personal or mobile aerosol characterization studies and measures approximately 22.5×22.5×15 cm and weighs about 4.5 kg including the battery. PAMS uses electrical mobility technique to measure number-weighted particle size distribution of aerosol in the 10–855 nm range. Aerosol particles are electrically charged using a dual-corona bipolar corona charger, followed by classification in a cylindrical miniature differential mobility analyzer. A condensation particle counter is used to detect and count particles. The mobility classifier was operated at an aerosol flow rate of 0.05 L/min, and at two different user-selectable sheath flows of 0.2 L/min (for wider size range 15–855 nm) and 0.4 L/min (for higher size resolution over the size range of 10.6–436 nm). The instrument was operated in voltage stepping mode to retrieve the size distribution in approximately 1–2 min. Sizing accuracy and resolution were probed and found to be within the 25% limit of NIOSH criterion for direct-reading instruments. Comparison of size distribution measurements from PAMS and other commercial mobility spectrometers showed good agreement. The instrument offers unique measurement capability for on-person or mobile size distribution measurement of ultrafine and nanoparticle aerosol.


Aerosol Science and Technology | 2016

Miniature differential mobility analyzer for compact field-portable spectrometers

Chaolong Qi; Pramod Kulkarni

ABSTRACT A low-flow miniature differential mobility analyzer (mDMA) has been developed for compact field-portable mobility spectrometers to classify the submicrometer aerosol. The mDMA was designed for an ultra-low aerosol flow rate of 0.05 L/min. At a sheath flow rate of 0.2 L/min, the mDMAs upper size limit was estimated to be about 921 nm. The mDMA has a classification zone of 2.54 cm long, an outer diameter of 2.54 cm, and an inner diameter of 1.778 cm. The design allows low-cost fabrication and easy assembly. Tandem DMA measurements were carried out to evaluate the performance of the mDMA. Its transfer function was described using Stolzenburgs model. The experimentally measured transfer function shows close agreement with the theory. The transmission efficiency was comparable to that of the Knutson–Whitby DMA for particles in the range of 10–1000 nm. The mobility resolution was comparable to that of the TSI 3085 nanoDMA at the same aerosol flow rate. The design features and performance of the mDMA make it suitable for compact field portable mobility size spectrometers for measurement of nanoparticles and submicrometer aerosol.


Journal of Occupational and Environmental Hygiene | 2015

Protection of Firefighters Against Combustion Aerosol Particles: Simulated Workplace Protection Factor of a Half-Mask Respirator (Pilot Study)

James Dietrich; Michael Yermakov; Tiina Reponen; Pramod Kulkarni; Chaolong Qi; Sergey A. Grinshpun

The present pilot study investigated the penetration of ultrafine particles originated by combustion of different materials into elastomeric half-mask respirators equipped with two P100 filters. We determined the Simulated Workplace Protection Factor (SWPF) for 11 firefighters wearing elastomeric half-mask respirators and performing activities simulating those conducted during fire overhaul operations. The tests were performed in a controlled laboratory setting. A newly-developed battery-operated Portable Aerosol Mobility Spectrometer (PAMS) was used to measure size-resolved aerosol particle concentrations outside (Cout) and inside (Cin) of an air-purifying respirator donned on a firefighter, and the SWPF was calculated as Cout/Cin. Based on the total aerosol concentration, the “total” SWPF ranged from 4,222 (minimum) to 35,534 (maximum) with values falling primarily in a range from 11,171 (25 percentile) to 26,604 (75 percentile) and a median value being ≈15,000. This is consistent with the recently reported fit factor (FF) data base.(1) The size-resolved SWPF data revealed a dependency on the particle size. It was concluded that a portable device such as PAMS can be used on firefighters during overhaul operations (as well as on other workers wearing elastomeric half-mask respirators) to monitor the aerosol concentrations in real time and ultimately help prevent overexposure.


Journal of Occupational and Environmental Hygiene | 2018

Physical chemical properties and cell toxicity of sanding copper-treated lumber

Jennifer D. Sisler; Chaolong Qi; Walter McKinney; Justine Shaffer; Michael E. Andrew; Taekhee Lee; Treye A. Thomas; Vincent Castranova; Robert R. Mercer; Yong Qian

Abstract To protect against decay and fungal invasion into the wood, the micronized copper, copper carbonate particles, has been applied in the wood treatment in recent years; however, there is little information on the health risk associated with sanding micronized copper-treated lumber. In this study, wood dust from the sanding of micronized copper azole-treated lumber (MCA) was compared to sanding dust from solubilized copper azole-treated wood (CA-C) and untreated yellow pine (UYP). The test found that sanding MCA released a much higher concentration of nanoparticles than sanding CA-C and UYP, and the particles between about 0.4–2 µm from sanding MCA had the highest percentage of copper. The percentage of copper in the airborne dust from sanding CA-C had a weak dependency on particle size and was lower than that from sanding MCA. Nanoparticles were seen in the MCA PM2.5 particles, while none were detected in the UYP or CA-C. Inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) analysis found that the bulk lumber for MCA and CA-C had relatively equal copper content; however, the PM2.5 particles from sanding the MCA had a higher copper concentration when compared to the PM2.5 particles from sanding UYP or CA-C. The cellular toxicity assays show that exposure of RAW 264.7 macrophages (RAW) to MCA and CA-C wood dust suspensions did not induce cellular toxicity even at the concentration of 200 µg PM2.5 wood dust/mL. Since the copper from the treated wood dust can leach into the wood dust supernatant, the supernatants of MCA, CA-C and UYP wood dusts were subjected to the cellular toxicity assays. The data showed that at the higher concentrations of copper (≥5 µg/ml), both MCA and CA-C supernatants induced cellular toxicity. This study suggests that sanding MCA-treated lumber releases copper nanoparticles and both the MCA and CA-C-treated lumber can release copper, which are potentially related to the observed in vitro toxicity.


Journal of Aerosol Science | 2012

Unipolar charging based, hand-held mobility spectrometer for aerosol size distribution measurement

Chaolong Qi; Pramod Kulkarni


AAAR 28th Annual Conference. | 2009

A Miniature Disk Electrostatic Aerosol Classifier for Personal Nanoparticle Sizers

Da-Ren Chen; Chaolong Qi; Pramod Kulkarni


Microscopy and Microanalysis | 2018

Microstructure and Chemical Characterization of Copper Nanoparticles in Wood Dust by TEM/STEM

Chen Wang; Chaolong Qi; Alan Dozier; Joseph E. Fernback; Pramod Kulkarni


AAAR 30th Annual Conference. | 2011

Development of Portable Aerosol Electrical Mobility Spectrometer for Aerosol Exposure Measurement

Pramod Kulkarni; Chaolong Qi; Takaharu Kato; Nobuhiko Fukushima


AAAR 28th Annual Conference. | 2009

New Miniature Unipolar Corona Charger for Personal Aerosol Instrumentation

Chaolong Qi; Pramod Kulkarni

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Pramod Kulkarni

National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health

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Da-Ren Chen

Washington University in St. Louis

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Nobuhiko Fukushima

Osaka Prefecture University

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Alan Dozier

University of Kentucky

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James Dietrich

University of Cincinnati

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Jennifer D. Sisler

National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health

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Joseph E. Fernback

National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health

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Justine Shaffer

National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health

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Michael E. Andrew

National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health

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