研究目的
Investigating the laser-induced aerosol ablation of sub-micron liquid particles via size-resolved spectral and image analyses to understand the signal variability and ablation mechanisms.
研究成果
The study identified two different sources of signal variability in submicron-sized aerosol particles: sample scarcity inside the plasma for smaller particles and plasma inhomogeneity for larger particles. Ensemble averaging reduced atomic signal variation to 3% for particles larger than 0.57 mm. The findings provide insights into the ablation mechanisms and signal variability, which can guide improvements in analytical results.
研究不足
The study focused on submicron-sized particles and may not be directly applicable to larger particles or different materials. The experimental setup required precise control of aerosol generation and laser parameters, which may limit reproducibility in less controlled environments.
1:Experimental Design and Method Selection
The study utilized laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS) for aerosol analysis, focusing on the ablation mechanism and signal variability of submicron-sized particles. High-density aerosol streams of monodisperse liquid aerosols were used to avoid the effect of low particle number concentration.
2:Sample Selection and Data Sources
Monodisperse aerosols in the range of 0.16–0.96 mm were generated using a condensation monodisperse aerosol generator. Diethylhexyl sebacate (DEHS) was used as the aerosol precursor material.
3:List of Experimental Equipment and Materials
A 6-way analysis chamber with a one-side co-flow system, condensation monodisperse aerosol generator (Model 3475, TSI Inc.), process aerosol monitor (Model 3375, TSI Inc.), flashlamp-pumped Q-switched Nd:YAG laser (Niemaa400, Beamteach Inc.), 7-channel spectrometer system (AVS-RACKMOUNT-USB2, Avantes Inc.), ICCD camera (Andor iStar 7334t).
4:Experimental Procedures and Operational Workflow
Aerosols were generated and introduced into the chamber with an additional co-flow to prevent coagulation. The laser was focused on the aerosol stream for plasma generation, and spectral and image data were collected for analysis.
5:Data Analysis Methods
The emission profiles of analyte lines from different ionization stages were investigated. Temporal profile electron number density was inspected, and plasma images were analyzed to examine changes in plasma formation due to different aerosol sizes.
独家科研数据包,助您复现前沿成果,加速创新突破
获取完整内容