E.
Albanes
a,
S.
Bezantakos
a,
M.
Costi
a and
G.
Biskos
*ab
aClimate & Atmosphere Research Centre, The Cyprus Institute, Cyprus. E-mail: g.biskos@cyi.ac.cy; g.biskos@tudelft.nl
bFaculty of Civil Engineering and Geosciences, Delft University of Technology, Delft, The Netherlands
First published on 14th June 2022
A sharp-cut cyclone with an aerodynamic cut-off diameter of 1 μm, when operated at a flow rate of 1 L min−1, was built by 3D-printing and tested against a metallic (aluminum) counterpart having the same design and dimensions. The penetration efficiency of both cyclones was experimentally determined using quasi-monodisperse aerosol particles having aerodynamic diameters from ca. 100 nm to 2 μm. The aerodynamic cut-off diameter for both cyclones was very similar and in accordance with the expected design value. The penetration efficiency curve of the 3D-printed cyclone was less steep compared to that of its metallic counterpart. This difference is most likely attributed to the higher surface roughness of the inner parts of the 3D-printed cyclone – as also indicated by the greater pressure drop it exhibits compared to the aluminum cyclone when operated at the same flow rate – and not by higher deviations from its design dimensions resulting from the tolerances of the 3D printer. Despite that, the substantially low cost, speed, and ease of manufacturing, make the 3D-printed cyclone a highly promising solution for applications in aerosol metrology.
Environmental significanceCyclones are commonly employed as particle segregators in ambient air particulate matter (PM) measurements. Although they are in general inexpensive compared to other components used in aerosol measurements, their price can become significant for applications such as regulatory air quality monitoring where the cut-off diameter is required to be accurate, adding to the overall cost of the measuring system. In this study, we designed and manufactured a cost-effective sharp-cut cyclone (SCC) by 3D-printing, which offers extremely low manufacturing cost and short production time. Considering also that the performance of the 3D-printed cyclone does not deviate much from that of its metallic counterpart as shown by our results, it provides a very good alternative for use in air quality monitoring. This, in turn, will enable building spatially dense networks for air quality observations, that will allow us to better assess the impacts of PM on human health and climate. |
Cyclones consist of two main parts: a cylindrical piece (namely the barrel) that serves as a pre-separator, and a conical part attached to the barrel where the separation of the large/heavier particles takes place. For some applications were very large/heavy particles need to be collected (e.g., in bioaerosol samplers) cyclones include a cup below the conical separator in order to collect the fraction of particles that can slide down the cone.11 Depending on the way that the gas stream enters and exits the conical part, cyclones can be classified as tangential (also referred to as flow-reverse), where the direction of the flow changes by 180°, or axial where the flow enters and exits axially.12 The flow-reverse operational mode of cyclones is as follows. The incoming aerosol enters tangentially through the inlet of the cyclone and the particles experience a centrifugal force that pushes them towards its walls; the larger/heavier particles deposit on the walls, while the smaller/lighter particles exit the cyclone through an outlet on its upper part.13
The ability of a cyclone to separate particles based on their size/weight depends on its design and the operating flow rate. Kenny & Gussman showed that it is possible to dimensionally scale cyclones of a specific design based on empirical models in order to have a specific aerodynamic cut-off diameter at a certain flow rate.14 As a results, it is possible to design a “family” of cyclones (i.e., a group of cyclones whose dimensions derive by following specific proportions of their body diameter),15 having a specific cut-off diameter when operated at the desired flow rate.16
For regulatory monitoring of atmospheric PM2.5, the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) recommends that the employed aerosol separators (i.e., cyclones or impactors) should have a steep drop in their penetration efficiency for particles having an aerodynamic diameter of 2.5 μm and above, when operated at a standard flow rate for ambient aerosol sampling (16.67 L min−1).17 Based on the design proposed originally by Smith et al., Kenny et al. developed a novel Sharp-Cut Cyclone (SCC), having a penetration curve that is closer to that of the Well Impactor Ninety Six (WINS),17,18 which is employed as a standard in regulatory monitoring of the ambient aerosol in the US.9 Due to its unique characteristics, the SCC family of cyclones is currently employed in many applications, (e.g., regulatory sampling of particles emitted by diesel engines), as it fulfills the requirements of many regulatory authorities.19
Cyclones are in general inexpensive compared to other components used in aerosol measurements. However, for applications where the cut-off diameter is required to be accurate, their price can become significant, ranging from hundreds to a couple of thousands USD due to the required manufacturing precision, adding to the overall cost of the measuring system. Reducing the cost of cyclones to the order of a few tens of USD, will allow us to increase the number of sampling points and thus expand the capabilities of air quality monitoring networks. For this reason, it is important to develop cost-effective SCCs without compromising their precision significantly.
An elegant way of fabricating cost-effective system components, including parts employed in particle processing and analysis systems, is by using 3D printing. For example, Yi et al. has recently designed and tested a 3D-printed mini-hydrocyclone separator (i.e., a cyclones for separating solids or different phase fluids from the bulk fluid).20 In this spirit, Loizidis et al., has employed 3D printing to build a flow laminarizer for use in high-precision instruments for aerosol size classification.21 In both these cases, the performance of the 3D printed components was comparable to that of counterparts produced by classical methods, while their cost of manufacturing was substantially lower.
In this study, we designed and manufactured a cost-effective SCC by 3D-printing, which offers low manufacturing cost and short production time. We designed a cyclone based on the semi-empirical model proposed by Gussman et al. having a cut-off diameter of 1 μm when operated at a flow rate of 1 L min−1.22 The performance of the 3D-printed cyclone was determined using particles having aerodynamic diameters from ca. 100 nm to 2 μm, and compared against a metallic (aluminum) counterpart – built at a machine shop – having the same design and dimensions.
![]() | (1) |
Fig. 1 shows an illustration of the cyclone, whereas Table 1 provides the dimensions of its parts expressed in proportion to the cyclone body diameter, including the designed and the measured (using a Vernier caliper) dimensions of both cyclones. The cyclone consists of three main parts; drawings ready for 3D printing all these parts are provided in the supplement. All dimensions of the 3D-printed cyclone have a tolerance of ±0.2 mm, while the respective tolerance for the metallic cyclone is ±0.1 mm. The tolerance for the 3D-printed cyclones was corroborated by printing and measuring 10 copies of all cyclone components. The outside surface of the 3D-printed cyclone was covered with dissolved ABS in order to close any voids and thus prevent potential leaks through the material.24
![]() | ||
Fig. 1 Schematic illustration of the cyclones (3D printed and metallic) developed and tested in this work, including their characteristic dimensions (see Table 1 for the specific values). |
Description | Symbol | Proportions with respect to Dc | Design dimensions SCC [mm] | Measured dimensions of the 3D-printed SCC [mm ± 0.01 mm] | Measured dimensions of the metallic SCC [mm ± 0.01 mm] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Diameter cyclone | D c | 1 | 4.85 | 4.65 | 4.75 |
Inlet diameter | D in | 0.24 | 1.16 | 1.20 | 1.20 |
Outlet diameter | D e | 0.27 | 1.31 | 1.30 | 1.30 |
Vortex finder height | S | 0.35 | 1.70 | 1.80 | 1.70 |
Cylinder height | h | 0.43 | 2.08 | 2.20 | 2.10 |
Cone height | Z | 1.56 | 7.56 | 7.40 | 7.50 |
Spigot diameter | B | 0.25 | 1.21 | 1.20 | 1.20 |
Cup height | H cup | 0.87 | 4.22 | 4.50 | 4.40 |
Cup length | D cup | 0.63 | 3.08 | 3.40 | 3.20 |
A Condensation Particle Counter (CPC; Model 3786; TSI Inc., Shoreview, MN, USA) was used to measure the particle number concentration of the monodisperse aerosol particles upstream and downstream the tested cyclones in order to determine their penetration curve. Because the tested cyclones required a flow rate of 1 L min−1 for achieving the desired cut-off diameter, while the CPC was operated at a total flow rate of 0.6 L min−1, an additional vacuum pump was added downstream the cyclone, pulling a constant flow rate of 0.4 L min−1. The flow through the cyclones was tested at the beginning and at the end of each experiment using a primary standard volumetric flow meter (Model Gilibrator 2; Sensidyne, St. Petersburg, FL, US).
In order to produce particles having diameters up to a few microns we used atomized solutions of Polystyrene Latex (PSL) spheres (Magsphere Inc; cf.Table 2 for details). In those measurements, instead of measuring the particle number concentrations with the CPC, we used an Optical Particle Sizer (OPS; Model 3300; TSI Inc., Shoreview, MN, USA) that measures the size distribution of aerosol particles having optical diameters in the range of 0.3 to 10 μm (cf.Fig. 2b). We should note here that the OPS is calibrated with PSL spheres, thus no correction was needed between to convert the measured optical equivalent aerosol diameters to nominal sizes. In those measurements (i.e., when the OPS was employed to measure the concentration of the PSL spheres upstream and downstream the cyclones), the additional pump downstream the tested cyclone was not operational, since the OPS provided the required flow rate of 1 L min−1.
Ammonium sulfate particles | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Electrical mobility (nm) ± 1 nm | 63 | 133 | 206 | 282 | 358 | 453 | 508 | 584 | 659 | 734 |
Aerodynamic (nm) | 100 | 200 | 300 | 400 | 500 | 600 | 700 | 800 | 900 | 1000 |
Polystyrene latex spheres | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nominal (nm) | 195 | 410 | 570 | 700 | 1000 | 1900 |
Aerodynamic (nm) ± 1 nm | 202 | 420 | 586 | 719 | 1029 | 1947 |
![]() | (2) |
The following logistic equation was used to fit the penetration efficiency measurements:25
![]() | (3) |
![]() | (4) |
Because cyclones are inertial separators, their penetration efficiency depends on the aerodynamic diameter, and not on the mobility or physical diameter, of the sampled aerosol particles. For this reason, both the electrical mobility diameters of the AS particles (i.e., classified with the DMA) and the optical equivalent/physical diameters of PSL spheres, were converted to aerodynamic diameters as:18
![]() | (5) |
To determine the dependence between the cut-off diameter and the flow rate, Dae50 was determined experimentally at four different flow rates (namely at 0.6, 1.0, 1.5 and, 2.0 L min−1), following the experimental procedures described in Section 2.2. In these experiments, the flow through the additional vacuum pump, located downstream the tested cyclones (cf., Fig. 2), was adjusted in order to achieve the required flow rates through the cyclones. The experimentally determined Dae50 values were compared with those predicted by eqn (1).
In addition to the penetration, we determined the pressure drop in both cyclones using a differential pressure manometer (Model GDH 200-07; GHM Group-Greisinger, Regenstauf, Germany). For these measurements we connected the high and low pressure node of the manometer respectively upstream and downstream the cyclone. We should note here that the pressure drop of the cyclone can be affected by the roughness of its inner surface similarly to the way that the inner surface of pipes can affect the pressure drop of the flow passing through them,28 and consequently affect its overall performance.
![]() | ||
Fig. 3 Measured and fitted (using eqn (3)) penetration as a function of particle aerodynamic diameter for (a) the metallic, and (b) the 3D-printed cyclones. |
The achieved and/or recommended tolerances in the cut-off diameters of cyclones are typically within less than 10%. Cauda et al., for instance, designed an SCC to have a Dae50 of 0.8 μm while the actual/measured value turned out to be 0.74 μm, corresponding to a difference of 7.5% from the design value.14 According to the Federal Reference Methods (FRM) of the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), cyclones employed in PM2.5 regulatory measurements should have a tolerance in their cut-off diameter of up to ±8% (i.e., Dae50 of 2.50 ± 0.25 μm) when operated at a flow rate of 16.67 L min−1.17 Evidently, the tolerance of 6% exhibited by the 3D-printed cyclone built and tested in this work is within the typical recommended values.
Fig. 4 shows the measured cut-off diameters for both the 3D-printed and the metallic cyclones when operated at 0.6, 1.0, 1.5, and 2.0 L min−1, together with predictions using eqn (1) for a cyclone having a body diameter of 4.85 mm. The agreement between measurements and predictions is within less than 6% for both cyclones, except for the case of the 3D-printed cyclone when operated at 2.0 L min−1 that deviated by 15% from the design value.
![]() | ||
Fig. 4 Cyclone cut-off diameter as a function of operating flow rate. Values predicted by eqn (1)correspond to a cyclone having a body diameter of 0.485 cm. |
The penetration efficiency curve of the metallic cyclone has a sharpness of 1.35, as determined by eqn (4), which is similar to the one reported by Kenny et al. and by Gussman et al. for SCCs having cut-off diameters of 1.0 and 2.5 μm.17,22 In contrast, the 3D-printed cyclone has a curve that is less steep, having a sharpness of 1.64, resembling the ones of the University Research Glassware (URG) cyclone as reported by Kenny et al.17 As reported by Kenny et al., the discrepancy between the sharpness of the metallic and the 3D-printed cyclone could in principle be explained by differences in their dimensions caused by manufacturing tolerances.29 Liu et al. showed that the penetration curve and especially the cut-off point of a cyclone are affected by the cone contraction angles, with the effect being more dominant as the flow rate through the cyclone increases.30 This is because the swirl of the flow becomes stronger, thereby decreasing the cut-off aerodynamic diameter, as the cone contraction angle is increased. In fact, it has been argued that the sharpness in short or small-coned cyclones is dominated by specific inlet and outlet dimensions (i.e., parameters Din, De, and h shown in Fig. 1), whereas in long or wide-coned cyclones it is dominated by the cone and base dimensions (i.e., parameter B and Z in Fig. 1).15 This explanation, however, seems unlikely for our results as all respective dimensions of the two cyclones are almost identical (cf.Table 1), yielding cone contraction angles that are equal within less than 1.5%. In addition, the measured cut-off diameters are very similar, as discussed above, supporting that differences in the dimensions (which are within less than 0.1 mm) are unlikely to affect the overall performance of the cyclones.
The discrepancy in the sharpness of the two cyclones can also be attributed to differences in the flow field caused by the roughness of their inner walls. Simulation studies have shown that increasing the inner roughness of cyclones can change the flow field within the cyclone due to the increased flow resistance, and thus the deposition efficiency of the particles.31,32 To investigate whether this could be the main reason for the observed discrepancy in the sharpness of the two cyclones, we measured the pressure drop (which is a proxy of flow resistance through confined flows; cf. Dzarma et al., for the case of pipes28) caused by both systems as a function of operating flow rate (cf.Table 3). For the metallic cyclone the pressure drop ranged from 0.049 to 0.973 kPa, as the flow rate increased from 0.6 to 0.3 L min−1. For the same range of flow rates the pressure drop through the 3D-printed cyclone increased from 0.067 to 1.345 kPa, whereas the difference in the pressure drop between the two cyclones when operated at 1.0 L min−1 was 0.06 kPa. Such a difference is not surprising as 3D-printed materials produced by Fused Deposition Modelling have surfaces with higher roughness compared to metallic surfaces,33 and can in principle justify variabilities in the flow fields within each cyclone, supporting the hypothesis that those can be the reason for the difference in the sharpness of the penetration efficiency curves. Testing this hypothesis, however, requires elaborate simulations for determining the performance of the cyclones, and explaining why the roughness of their inner surfaces affects only the sharpness and not the cutoff diameter. Without such simulations, which are outside the scope of the current work, attributing the deviation in the sharpness between the 3D-printed and the metallic cyclones to differences in their roughness can only be speculative.
Flow rate [L min−1] | Metal [kPa ± 0.01 kPa] | 3D-printed [kPa ± 0.01 kPa] |
---|---|---|
0.6 | 0.049 | 0.067 |
1 | 0.111 | 0.171 |
1.5 | 0.247 | 0.335 |
2 | 0.424 | 0.601 |
2.5 | 0.645 | 0.805 |
3 | 0.973 | 1.345 |
We should note here that the sharpness of the penetration efficiency curves of cyclones (and other similar size separators) can be important for a number of applications including air quality monitoring where high accuracy and precision is required. For other applications (e.g., personal sampling), where sizing accuracy is not so important, the sharpness in the penetration efficiency curves can be traded for other features such as low cost and ease/speed of manufacturing, which become especially important when such systems have to be employed in large numbers. This is particularly true for the 3D-printed cyclone developed and built here, which exhibits a cut-off size similar to that of its metallic counterpart, but with a considerable lower cost and easiness in manufacturing. We should highlight here that the time required to construct the 3D-printed cyclone was a fraction (around ¼) of that required to build the metallic version, and most importantly it did not require the constant supervision of a person, thereby reducing substantially the cost of production. Furthermore, the cost of the materials and the investment for the tools (i.e., a 3D printer that costs a few hundred USD) required to build a 3D-printed cyclone, are at least one order of magnitude lower compared to those required for manufacturing a metallic cyclone, making it a much more attractive and feasible solution.
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