On 2017 Jun 26, Valerio Cozzani commented:
Classification of Aerosols formed in the operation of Heat-not-Burn tobacco products.
“Smoke” is nowadays a term frequently used in colloquial non-technical language to indicate a wide number of different aerosols originated by the combustion or pyrolysis of a material. However, from a technical point of view, due to its importance for fire science, several definitions were adopted to clarify what aerosols should be classified as “smoke” (e.g. see the comprehensive discussions provided by Gross et al. (1967), Mulholland (2008), and Drysdale (2011) to have some examples). A comprehensive definition is given by the National Fire Protection Association (See NFPA 921): smoke is composed of airborne solid and liquid particulates and gases evolved when a material undergoes pyrolysis or combustion, together with the quantity of air that is entrained or otherwise mixed into the mass. Moreover, the above definition clearly remarks that smoke, as evident from the literature, may have a very different chemical and physical nature compared to other aerosols:
1) from a physical point of view it may be composed of solid and liquid particles with different size distributions and concentrations;
2) from a chemical point of view, smoke components may be: i) condensed, liquid combustion products, and/or ii) condensed, liquid products of partial combustion (as high molecular weight and/or low vapor pressure organic liquids formed during fuel primary pyrolysis and volatile emission), and/or iii) solid combustion products (mainly graphitic carbon particles as soot, and inorganic fly ashes), iv) and/or unburned or partially oxidized solid or liquid fuel particles.
Smoke from tobacco combustion has specific features, as reported in reference publications (e.g. see Baker, 2006), and has a very complex composition, including all the above cited chemical components such as: condensed liquid drops of volatiles (tar), soot, and ashes. There is no doubt that the aerosol stream produced by a burning cigarette may be classified as “smoke” according to its definitions reported in the scientific and technical literature.
Recently, Philip Morris International (PMI) developed a heat-not-burn tobacco product, that operates with very different modalities with respect to conventional cigarettes. Even if also in the operation of the heat-not-burn tobacco product an aerosol stream is formed, its classification as “smoke” is not appropriate. The aerosol generated in the PMI heat-not-burn tobacco product is very different in the chemical composition from the smoke formed by the self-sustained smoldering combustion of tobacco in cigarettes and more in general from smoke formed in combustion processes. The aerosol generated in the heat-not-burn tobacco product is composed mainly of water and of products deriving from the evaporation, in the absence of chemical reactions, of substances present in the original tobacco substrate present in the heat-not-burn tobacco product. Even applying the more comprehensive definitions of smoke reported in the literature, these do not apply to the aerosol produced in the operation of such devices, since:
i) experimental data have confirmed that combustion processes are absent in the PMI tobacco product when heated in the heat-not-burn device.
ii) the aerosol produced by the heat-not-burn tobacco product during operation is formed mostly by vaporization phenomena, as proven by the experimental data showing its chemical characterization
iii) very limited low temperature pyrolysis phenomena may be present in the tobacco substrate present in the device during the operation of the heat-not-burn tobacco product (temperatures during operation are lower than 350°C)
Nevertheless, it should be remarked that the above only concerns the correct scientific definition of “smoke” and its applicability to heat-not-burn tobacco products, and that in no way what is written above addresses health issues related to the inhalation of such aerosols.
References
Baker R.R., Smoke generation inside cigarette: Modifying combustion to develop cigarettes that may be less hazardous to health, Progress in Energy and Combustion Science, 32, 373-385, 2006.
Drysdale D., Introduction to Fire Dynamics, 3rd Edition, J.Wiley & Sons Ltd, UK, 2011
Gross D., J.J. Loftus, A.F. Robertson, Method for measuring smoke from burning materials. Symposium on Fire Test Methods – Restraint and Smoke, 1966 ASTM STP 422 (ed. A.F. Robertson), pp. 166–204. American Society for Testing and Materials, Philadelphia, PA.
Mulholland G.W., Smoke production and properties, SFPE Handbook of Fire Protection Engineering, 4th Ed. (Eds Di Nenno et al.), pp. 2.291–2.302. National Fire Protection Association, Quincy, MA, 2008.
National Fire Protection Association, NFPA Glossary of Terms, 2016 Edition, Updated September 23rd 2016, 2016; p.1336. http://www.nfpa.org/codes-and-standards/resources/glossary-of-terms. Last accessed June 26th, 2017.
Valerio Cozzani is Professor of Chemical Engineering at University of Bologna, Italy. This comment is provided on the basis of the results of a scientific evaluation of PMI’s heat-not-burn device committed by PMI
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