Williams & Talbot: Variability Among Electronic Cigarettes [Nicotine Tob Res]

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Tom09

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Talbot added another paper to her somewhat awkward e-cig series (preceeding publications have been Trtchounian et al. 2010, Nicotine Tob Res and Trtchounian & Talbot 2010, Tobacco Control):


Williams M & Talbot P: Variability Among Electronic Cigarettes in the Pressure Drop, Airflow Rate, and Aerosol Production. Nicotine Tob Res 2011 Oct 12. (online first)


INTRODUCTION: This study investigated the performance of electronic cigarettes (e-cigarettes), compared different models within a brand, compared identical copies of the same model within a brand, and examined performance using different protocols.
METHODS: Airflow rate required to generate aerosol, pressure drop across e-cigarettes, and aerosol density were examined using three different protocols.
RESULTS: First 10 puff protocol: The airflow rate required to produce aerosol and aerosol density varied among brands, while pressure drop varied among brands and between the same model within a brand. Total air hole area correlated with pressure drop for some brands. Smoke-out protocol: E-cigarettes within a brand generally performed similarly when puffed to exhaustion; however, there was considerable variation between brands in pressure drop, airflow rate required to produce aerosol, and the total number of puffs produced. With this protocol, aerosol density varied significantly between puffs and gradually declined. Consecutive trial protocol: Two copies of one model were subjected to 11 puffs in three consecutive trials with breaks between trials. One copy performed similarly in each trial, while the second copy of the same model produced little aerosol during the third trial. The different performance properties of the two units were attributed to the atomizers.
Conclusion:There was significant variability between and within brands in the airflow rate required to produce aerosol, pressure drop, length of time cartridges lasted, and production of aerosol. Variation in performance properties within brands suggests a need for better quality control during e-cigarette manufacture.

(abstract only here)
 

tommy2bad

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Conclusion:There was significant variability between and within brands in the airflow rate required to produce aerosol, pressure drop, length of time cartridges lasted, and production of aerosol. Variation in performance properties within brands suggests a need for better quality control during e-cigarette manufacture.

Wow she discovered that consistency is a problem, couda just asked, I'd a told her that.
 

Vocalek

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The logical next step should be for her to conduct a clinical trial, recruiting smokers interested in quitting--preferably those who have tried at least three times in the past using FDA approved medications and/or formal counselling.

She could then compare the success rates of these brands, as well as any adverse effects from these "inconsistencies." Now THAT would be valuable.
 
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