On 2017 Feb 11, Andrey Khlystov commented:
Dr. Hajek,
You have not read the paper carefully. As I said earlier, our paper has information on 5 liquids that should be enough to get anybody started in replicating the data. They are from Brand II, which is V2 Standard (see Table 1). The brand is very easy to find (www.v2.com). The other liquids were from local vape shops, but this is of little consequence for the study, see below.
You seem to miss the point of our paper. Please let me briefly summarize its message: flavors, especially at higher concentrations, appear to dominate aldehyde production. To check generality of our observations, all one needs to do is take any flavored liquid and test it at different concentrations and/or against unflavored liquids and see what happens.
Contrary to what you suggest, there is little value in testing exactly the same liquids. Testing specific liquids or flavors was not the point of our study. We observed that a fairly wide variety of randomly selected flavored liquids produce significant aldehyde emissions, with aldehyde profiles varying among different flavors. If only PG or VG were responsible for the majority of aldehyde emissions, there would be no differences among liquids that have the same PG/VG composition. Yet, we observed significant differences among such liquids.
I also doubt that liquids from different batches are exactly the same, especially from small-time operations. At the time of writing the paper, we did not measure concentrations of liquid constituents. Having understood their role, we are controlling for liquid composition in our on-going study. As we mentioned in the letter to ES&T, we see appreciable aldehyde concentrations in both mainstream and secondary aerosols for a wide variety of e-cigarettes and liquids that users bring to our study. High aldehyde emissions are not limited to the 15 liquids and 3 e-cigarette brands we tested in our original study, it appears; the problem seems to be quite universal.
As we stated in our letter to ES&T, we are calling for checking findings of ANY e-cigarette study. I would like to note, however, that if one doubts our measurements, he or she needs to come up with a plausible mechanism, other than the effect of flavors, that explains why unflavored liquids produced significantly lower emissions than flavored ones or why a diluted flavored liquid was producing less than a more concentrated one. Please note, this was observed for the same e-cigarette, the same power output, and the same experimental setup. As of now and as far as I know, nobody came up with a single credible reason to doubt our results. I would also like to stress that aldehyde measurements are not trivial. We have over 20 years of experience in these measurements with a solid track record of QA/QC. Please rest assured - we stand by the quality of our data.
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