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¿¬»ç Jason Olfert
°­ÁÂÀϽà 2017. 7. 13.(¸ñ)  16:00~17:00
°­Á Á¦¸ñ Beyond particle mobility classifiers: Classifying particles by mass or relaxation time
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1. Á¦ ¸ñ : Beyond particle mobility classifiers: Classifying particles by mass or relaxation time


2. ¿¬ »ç : Jason Olfert (Associate Professor in Mechanical Engineering at the Univ. of Alberta)


3. ÀÏ ½Ã : 2017³â 7¿ù 13ÀÏ (¸ñ), 16:00~17:00


4. Àå ¼Ò : ¼­¿ï´ëÇб³ 301µ¿ 1420È£


5. ³» ¿ë : Mobility classifiers, like the differential mobility analyzer (DMA), have been used for decades to separate polydisperse aerosols into classes so that the particles can be counted or otherwise measured by another instrument. The DMA is routinely used to measure particle count distributions or generate a ¡°monodisperse¡± aerosol. More recently, classifiers have been developed to classify particles by their mass-to-charge ratio (centrifugal particle mass analyzers, CPMA) or relaxation time (aerodynamic aerosol classifier, AAC). This presentation will describe the operating principles behind the CPMA and AAC and show how they can be used in applications where a DMA is not suitable. In particular, the CPMA can be used to:


I) measure particle mass distributions,

ii) measure soot morphological properties (e.g. effective density, shape factor, primary particle size),

iii) measure the size-segregated mixing state of an aerosol (i.e. measure the mass of volatile material in the aerosol and determine if it exists as individual particles or mixed into the structure of a non-volatile particle), or

iv) traceably calibrate mass concentration instruments like photoacoustic or laser induced incandescence instruments.


6. ¾à ·Â :


Dr Jason Olfert is an Associate Professor in Mechanical Engineering at the University of Alberta. His research is focused on developing novel aerosol instruments, characterizing particulate emissions from combustion sources, and understanding how aerosols affect global climate. Dr. Olfert¡¯s past and current research is focused on particulate emissions from internal combustion engines, gas turbine engines, flares, and burners. He has worked on the development of the centrifugal particle mass analyzer and aerodynamic aerosol classifier which are sold or licensed by Cambustion Ltd. Dr Olfert has been awarded the Sheldon K Friedlander Award, Masao Horiba Award, and Fissan-Pui-TSI Award for his contributions to aerosol science and was a recent recipient of an NSERC Discovery Accelerator.



 ¹® ÀÇ : ¸ÖƼ½ºÄÉÀÏ ¿¡³ÊÁö ½Ã½ºÅÛ ¿¬±¸´Ü ¿¬±¸Áö¿øº»ºÎ (¢Î 889-6669,6670) ÃÖ¸¸¼ö ±³¼ö (±â°èÇ×°ø°øÇкÎ)




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