PARTICLE CHARGING AT LOW PRESSURES 263 puter calculations’ have been met only with limited success because of the complexity of the charging equations involved. It is hoped that the present study, in which the mean free path and the electric mobility of the ions are varied over a wide range of values because of the variation in pressure, will provide data that can be used as rather severe tests of any new charging theories. EXPERIMENTAL APPROACH AND APPARATUS Any experimental study of the physics of aerosols can be made, in principle at least, on a single particle or on a cloud of particles. The latter approach is generally preferred since the statistical nature of the processes generally involved would render the results of many single-particle measurements quite difficult, if not impossible, to interpret. Furthermore, for submicron particles of interest in the present study, single-particle measurements are quite difficult to make. Figure 1 is a diagram of the experimental system used, More detailed diagrams of the particle charger, small ion-mobility analyzer, and particle-charge spectrometer are shown in Figs, 2 and 3. It should be noted that the charging and precipitation of the particles are carried out in two separate devices. This approach of separating the particle charger and the precipitator (the particle-charge spectrometer) has the advantage of permitting a more accurate determination of the particle charge than is possible when the charger and precipitator are combined as in the conventional electrostatic precipitator, It also permits the variables affecting the particle charge tobe more precisely defined. AEROSOL GENERATION AND NEUTRALIZATION The aerosols used in these experiments were solid, spherical particles of dye obtained by atomizing solutions of the dye and drying the liquid droplets formed. Commercial-grade methylene blue dye was used in all the tests with the exception of two in which uranine was used. Uranine is somewhat hygroscopic and cannot be dried as readily as methylene blue. However, the fact that very minute quantities of uranine can be measured accurately by means of fluorescence tech- niques? has made it a desirable material to use when the mass of aerosol collected must be determined. Aerosols produced by atomization processes have been found to carry a very substantial electrical charge. Since it is desirable that the aerosols be neutral initially, provision must be made to remove these initial electrical charges. The usual procedure of neutralizing an aerosol is to mix the aerosol stream with a mixture of ions of both plus and minus signs. A sonic-jet bipolar ion generator (described in

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