I can't correlate the results at six watts in these Vivi Nova tests with Dr Kurt's CE4 conclusions, as Kurt indicates that even at those lower levels of power and temp, emissions are dangerously high. Do CE4's just get hotter at the same resistance/power settings? Is 400F actually too high to keep the nasties at safe levels? I can't effectively compare specific circumstances Kurt used to draw those conclusions with the power/temp results we see in these tests.
Be it right, wrong, or indifferent, here is the protocol the Dr Kurt used.
(Link to entire presentation)
Kurt A. Kistler, PhD
Department of Chemistry
Penn State Brandywine, Media, PA
Subject Matter Expert, AEMSA
Present at:
National Academies of the Sciences, Washington, DC
February 21, 2017
A quote from an ECF post regarding the study he did:
We used only one liquid formulation: about 50:50 PG:VG with 1.2% nicotine. We did this to compare directly with the early-2015 studies that used this formulation, but pushed the power of their CE4 devices beyond what a normal vaper would use or even tolerate. We all knew this was true, and there have been many valid criticisms those studies, as well as how the media covered them, but published peer-reviewed data was greatly needed to truly provide a more complete picture. That said, our results on a CE4 device were not good either, at any power setting. We did not measure for propionaldehyde, but acknowledged that it could be present with the other three aldehydes.
The actual peer reviewed study: Effect of variable power levels on the yield of total aerosol mass and formation of aldehydes in e-cigarette aerosols
Also, he was using 2.8ohm stock coils in his study.
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