G. W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia 30332-0405, USA.
J Am Soc Mass Spectrom. 2010 Apr;21(4):501-10. doi: 10.1016/j.jasms.2009.12.022. Epub 2010 Jan 18.
Charge transport and separation in mechanically-driven, droplet-based ion sources are investigated using computational analysis and supporting experiments. A first-principles model of electrohydrodynamics (EHD) and charge migration is formulated and implemented using FLUENT CFD software for jet/droplet formation. For validation, classical experiments of electrospraying from a thin capillary are simulated, specifically, the transient EHD cone-jet formation of a fluid with finite electrical conductivity, and the Taylor cone formation in a perfectly electrically-conducting fluid. The model is also used to investigate the microscopic physics of droplet charging in mechanically-driven droplet-based ion sources, such as array of micromachined ultrasonic electrospray (AMUSE). Here, AMUSE is subject to DC and AC electric fields of varying amplitude and phase, with respect to a time-varying mechanical force driving the droplet formation. For the DC-charging case, a linear relationship is demonstrated between the charge carried by each droplet and an applied electric field magnitude, in agreement with previously reported experiments. For the AC-charging case, a judiciously-chosen phase-shift in the time-varying mechanical (driving ejection) and electrical (driving charge transport) signals allows for a significantly increased amount of charge, of desired polarity, to be pumped into a droplet upon ejection. Complementary experimental measurements of electrospray electrical current and charge-per-droplet, produced by the AMUSE ion source, are performed and support theoretical predictions for both DC- and AC-charging cases. The theoretical model and simulation tools provide a versatile and general analytical framework for fundamental investigations of coupled electrohydrodynamics and charge transport. The model also allows for the exploration of different configurations and operating modes to optimize charge separation in atmospheric pressure electrohydrodynamic ion sources under static and dynamic electrical and mechanical fields.
使用计算分析和支持性实验研究了机械驱动的液滴基离子源中的电荷输运和分离。我们提出并实现了一种基于第一性原理的电动力学(EHD)和电荷迁移模型,使用 FLUENT CFD 软件对射流/液滴形成进行模拟。为了验证,我们模拟了经典的电喷雾实验,特别是具有有限电导率的流体的瞬态 EHD 锥射流形成和完全导电流体的泰勒锥形成。该模型还用于研究机械驱动液滴基离子源中液滴充电的微观物理现象,例如微机电超声电喷雾(AMUSE)阵列。在这里,AMUSE 受到幅度和相位不断变化的直流和交流电场的影响,同时受到驱动液滴形成的时变机械力的影响。对于直流充电情况,我们证明了每个液滴所携带的电荷与施加的电场强度之间存在线性关系,这与之前报道的实验结果一致。对于交流充电情况,在时变机械(驱动喷射)和电气(驱动电荷输运)信号之间选择恰当的相移,可以显著增加在喷射时注入液滴的所需极性的电荷量。通过 AMUSE 离子源进行的电喷雾电流和液滴电荷量的补充实验测量支持了直流和交流充电情况的理论预测。该理论模型和模拟工具为耦合电动力学和电荷输运的基础研究提供了通用的分析框架。该模型还允许探索不同的配置和操作模式,以在静态和动态电气和机械场下优化大气压电动力学离子源中的电荷分离。