Scientific Reports (Feb 2022)

Characterization of exhaled e-cigarette aerosols in a vape shop using a field-portable holographic on-chip microscope

  • Ege Çetintaş,
  • Yi Luo,
  • Charlene Nguyen,
  • Yuening Guo,
  • Liqiao Li,
  • Yifang Zhu,
  • Aydogan Ozcan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-07150-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract The past decade marked a drastic increase in the usage of electronic cigarettes. The adverse health impact of secondhand exposure due to exhaled e-cig particles has raised significant concerns, demanding further research on the characteristics of these particles. In this work, we report direct volatility measurements on exhaled e-cig aerosols using a field-portable device (termed c-Air) enabled by deep learning and lens-free holographic microscopy; for this analysis, we performed a series of field experiments in a vape shop where customers used/vaped their e-cig products. During four days of experiments, we periodically sampled the indoor air with intervals of ~ 16 min and collected the exhaled particles with c-Air. Time-lapse inline holograms of the collected particles were recorded by c-Air and reconstructed using a convolutional neural network yielding phase-recovered microscopic images of the particles. Volumetric decay of individual particles due to evaporation was used as an indicator of the volatility of each aerosol. Volatility dynamics quantified through c-Air experiments showed that indoor vaping increased the percentage of volatile and semi-volatile particles in air. The reported methodology and findings can guide further studies on volatility characterization of indoor e-cig emissions.