NanoSpot collector for aerosol sample collection for direct microscopy and spectroscopy analysis

Aerosol Sci Technol. 2023 Jan;57(4):342-354. doi: 10.1080/02786826.2023.2167648.

Abstract

We describe design and characterization of an aerosol NanoSpot collector, designed for collection of airborne particles on a microscopy substrate for direct electron and optical microscopy, and laser spectroscopy analysis. The collector implements a water-based, laminar-flow, condensation growth technique, followed by impaction onto an optical/electron microscopy substrate or a transmission electron microscopy grid for direct analysis. The compact design employs three parallel growth tubes allowing a sampling flow rate of 1.2 L min-1. Each growth tube consists of three-temperature regions, for controlling the vapor saturation profile and exit dew point. Following the droplet growth, the three streams merge into one flow and a converging nozzle enhances focusing of grown droplets into a tight beam, prior to their final impaction on the warm surface of the collection substrate. Experiments were conducted for the acquisition of the size-dependent collection efficiency and the aerosol concentration effect on the NanoSpot collector. Particles as small as 7 nm were activated and collected on the electron microscopy stub. The collected particle samples were analyzed using electron microscopy and Raman spectroscopy for the acquisition of the particle spatial distribution, the spot sample uniformity, and the analyte concentration. A spot deposit of approximately 0.7-mm diameter is formed for particles over a broad particle diameter range, for effective coupling with microscopic and spectroscopic analysis. Finally, the NanoSpot collector's analytical measurement sensitivity for laser Raman analysis and counting statistics for fiber count measurement using optical microscopy were calculated and were compared with those of the conventional aerosol sampling methods.