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Technical Note

Performance of the Naneos partector 2 multi-metric nanoparticle detector at reduced temperature and pressure conditions

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Pages 584-593 | Received 17 Oct 2023, Accepted 15 Feb 2024, Published online: 03 Apr 2024
 

Abstract

Portable instruments that can measure the number concentration and size of airborne nanoparticles are very useful for assessing their impacts on human health and climate, mainly because they can enable personal monitoring when carried by individuals, and/or 2- or 3-dimensional mappings when employed onboard mobile platforms. Partector 2 (P2), which is a lightweight and portable instrument manufactured by Naneos Particle Solutions GmbH (Windisch, Switzerland), can determine the concentration (up to 106 #/cm3) and average diameter of aerosol particles having sizes from 10 to 300 nm, making it an excellent candidate for such measurements. Although its performance has been investigated at standard conditions (i.e., ground level pressure and room temperatures), it has not been assessed under reduced pressure and temperature conditions that are typically encountered at higher altitudes; e.g., when employed outdoors in mountainous environments and/or onboard Unmanned Aerial Systems; UASs. Here we assess the counting and sizing capabilities of P2 at temperatures from ca. 22 down to 4 °C, and pressures from 1013 down to 710 hPa that correspond to altitudes from sea level to ca. 3 km. Our results show that the performance of the instrument is not substantially affected when operated at these conditions, remaining within the accuracy thresholds of ±30% reported by the manufacturer. P2, therefore, qualifies for outdoor use at higher altitudes, and can be employed in such environments to determine the number concentration and mean size of sub-300 nm aerosol particles, complementing existing portable optical particle counters that are already employed onboard aerial systems.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Data availability statement

10.5281/zenodo.8416676

Additional information

Funding

This work has received funding from the EMME-CARE project, which is funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No. 856612 and the Cyprus Government. The authors also thank Martin Fiertz and Lukas Zuber for all the fruitful interaction and information they provided.