I wonder if the combined aldehydes pose the same or lower risks as one individual aldehyde of the same amount?
Notice that VG scored the highest of all the liquids tested, and 270C is a temp that folks do vape at.
"Insufficient data for a meaningful answer."To this end, I think it would be wise to understand for different wire types what temp will be reached at certain wattages based on the resistance/mass of the coil.
"Insufficient data for a meaningful answer."
Coil geometry, wicking, viscosity & boiling point of liquid, and airflow will all have a substantial influence.
"Insufficient data for a meaningful answer."
Coil geometry, wicking, viscosity & boiling point of liquid, and airflow will all have a substantial influence.
My apologies in advance if this has already been posted. At the bottom of this page E-Cigarette Summit UK 2017 is a video of Dr. F speaking very recently at an e-cig summit. Well worth watching and directly relevent to this thread. He was comparing toxicants between cigarettes, heat not burn and vaping. My impression from the presentation is heat not burn produces 10% of what's found in cigarettes and vaping produces 1%,. I believe I heard him say the vaping test involved a nautilus mini. Based on what he finds it's a stretch to say even tootle puffers have to worry much about bad chemicals. (Long live the tootle puffers.)
but if we can at least be in the ball park of relative safety
I know this is an old thread, but I would like to say that the only variable we need is coil temp. I am glad some e-cig researchers are finally figuring this out. However, not all have. I read a paper published this year where the researchers were going on and on about wattage and resistance in their "methods" section. Not once did they mention temperature, heat capacity or coil surface area. It's as if they don't understand the first thing about thermodynamics. But, hey, why should they? Most of them are in the medical field, not physics. Ask them about cell biology and I am sure they are experts, but when it comes to physics 101, they are clueless (sad really).
The truth is that wattage and coil resistance mean absolutely nothing here. What matters is coil temp. You can have a 1.8ohm coil in a kayfun at 9W reach much higher temps than a 0.3 in a dual-coil RDA at 75W. The glycerol and PG don't give a damn about coil resistance or wattage or airflow -- they only care about one thing: how hot is it?
So I ask these e-cig researchers to do three things before they write their next paper:
1) Walk over to your physics department at your university and ask for a crash course in thermodynamics. This is really basic stuff that I am sure any professor or grad student will be happy to help you with.
2) Start using modern devices in your studies. These guys are still using Kanger EVOD's in 2017 research papers. Even the most newbie vaper doesn't use those attys anymore.
3) Please study temp control devices. I would love to see an Evolv or Yihi board utilized in these studies to determine the effect temp control has on the carbonyl emissions. Accuracy aside, these boards WILL keep the vape at a constant temperature throughout the duration of the draw. Airflow doesn't matter, the build doesn't matter, the chamber size and dimensions don't matter. All that matters is that the mod is keeping the temp constant. I would like to see a comparison with such a mod and a laboratory chamber that can accurately measure the temp inside. Depending on the wire type used, I doubt these mods are more than 5°C off.
yond 440f/450f, and also the almost complete absence of these toxins at temperatures below 440f.
Is there a chart somewhere that can convert my 8w to temp?
I apologize for not fully reading and understanding this thread.
Is there a chart somewhere that can convert my 8w to temp?
I apologize for not fully reading and understanding this thread.
Confirmed, that offer is still open. However, let me know the atty type first so I can look it up and see if it is one I am capable of testing. I have been pretty successful with most attys so far. However, some of the newer atties with dual parallel coils present a challenge as the dual coils are so close to each other that the thermocouple tip shorts them out.If your topper and preferred coil can be accessed with his thermocouple, Mike will test it as long as you cover return shipping and donate three sacrificial coils. Better than any chart which would have numerous assumptions.