4.7 Article

Characterization of an Electronic Nicotine Delivery System (ENDS) Aerosol Generation Platform to Determine Exposure Risks

Journal

TOXICS
Volume 11, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/toxics11020099

Keywords

electronic cigarette; e-liquids; emissions; monitoring; particles

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Evaluating the parameters that influence electronic nicotine delivery system (ENDS) emissions and exposure levels is crucial for protecting human health. A multi-channel ENDS aerosol generation system (EAGS) was developed to study particle emissions from pod- and mod-type devices. The study found that device type, e-liquid flavoring, and nicotine content can affect particle emissions. The EAGS was shown to produce realistic and reproducible puff profiles, making it a suitable platform for studying ENDS-associated exposure risks.
Evaluating vaping parameters that influence electronic nicotine delivery system (ENDS) emission profiles and potentially hazardous exposure levels is essential to protecting human health. We developed an automated multi-channel ENDS aerosol generation system (EAGS) for characterizing size-resolved particle emissions across pod- and mod-type devices using real-time monitoring instruments, an exposure chamber, and vaping parameters including different ventilation rates, device type and age, e-liquid formulation, and atomizer setup. Results show the ENDS device type, e-liquid flavoring, and nicotine content can affect particle emissions. In general, pod-type devices have unimodal particle size distributions and higher number emissions, while mod-type devices have bimodal size distributions and higher mass emissions. For pod-type devices, later puff fractions emit lower aerosols, which is potentially associated with the change of coil resistance and power during ageing. For a mod-type device, an atomizer with a lower resistance coil and higher power generates larger particle emissions than an atomizer with a greater resistance coil and lower power. The unventilated scenario produces higher particle emission factors, except for particle mass emission from pod-type devices. The data provided herein indicate the EAGS can produce realistic and reproducible puff profiles of pod- and mod-type ENDS devices and therefore is a suitable platform for characterizing ENDS-associated exposure risks.

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