| Literature DB >> 33004992 |
Soha Talih1,2, Rola Salman1,2, Rachel El-Hage3,2, Nareg Karaoghlanian1,2, Ahmad El-Hellani3,2, Najat Saliba3,2, Alan Shihadeh4,5.
Abstract
Nicotine in electronic cigarette (ECIG) liquids can exist in a free-base or protonated (or "salt") form. Protonated nicotine is less aversive upon inhalation than free-base nicotine, and many ECIG manufacturers have begun marketing protonated nicotine products, often with high nicotine concentrations. Regulations intended to control ECIG nicotine delivery limit nicotine concentration but do not consider nicotine form. In this study, we systematically examined the effect of nicotine form on nicotine yield for varying powers and liquid vehicles. A Kanger Subox Mini-C tank ECIG (0.5 Ω) was used to generate aerosols at varying powers (5-45 W) from liquid solutions that contained either free-base or protonated nicotine at 15 mg/g concentration, with a liquid vehicle consisting of either propylene glycol (PG) or vegetable glycerin (VG), resulting in four different solutions (free-base/PG, free-base/VG, protonated/PG, and protonated/VG). Nicotine yield was quantified using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Nicotine yields were not influenced by nicotine form under any condition investigated. At each power level, PG-based liquids resulted in approximately double the nicotine yield of VG-based liquids. Nicotine concentrations in the aerosols matched those of the parent liquids for both the PG and VG conditions. Increasing power led to greater nicotine yield across all conditions. The amount of nicotine emitted by an ECIG is independent of whether the nicotine is free-base or protonated, however the liquid vehicle has a strong effect on yield. Regulations intended to limit nicotine emissions must consider not only nicotine concentration, but also liquid vehicle and device power.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33004992 PMCID: PMC7530983 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-73385-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Average (± SD) nicotine yield (mg/15puffs) across conditions that differ by nicotine form, PG/VG ratio, and powers. Filled symbols indicate a significant difference from the 10 W condition, asterisks (*) indicate significant differences from the 0/100 PG/VG condition for each tested power.
Mean (SD) of nicotine and TPM yields (N = 3) obtained using free-base and protonated nicotine at varying powers and PG/VG ratios.
| PG/VG | Power (W) | Nicotine (mg/15puffs) | TPM (mg/15puffs) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Free-base | Protonated | Free-base | Protonated | ||
| 100/0 | 5a | 0.31 (0.10) | 0.31 (0.07) | 17.58 (9.35) | 17.48 (3.49) |
| 100/0 | 10 | 1.97 (0.16) | 2.18 (0.34) | 154.1 (10.81) | 168.4 (44.48) |
| 100/0 | 15 | 4.07 (0.23) | 4.48 (0.61) | 309.7 (12.3) | 346.4 (48.56) |
| 100/0 | 30 | 10.6 (0.87) | 10.2 (0.47) | 721.5 (42.75) | 748.75 (62.82) |
| 100/0 | 45 | 13.2 (0.06) | 13.9 (0.48) | 941.5 (16.04) | 956.25 (36.4) |
| 0/100 | 10 | 0.27 (0.03) | 0.31 (0.06) | 7.15 (1.78) | 3.15 (1.3) |
| 0/100 | 15 | 1.09 (0.08) | 1.23 (0.47) | 59.65 (14.64) | 55.25 (44.51) |
| 0/100 | 30 | 5.57 (0.1) | 5.27 (0.27) | 547.25 (25.7) | 501 (56.51) |
| 0/100 | 45 | 6.88 (0.29) | 7.38 (1.04) | 799.5 (8.11) | 793.5 (33.85) |
aWhile the lowest power used for the PG liquid was equal to 5 W, this power level was insufficient to generate a quantifiable amount of aerosol using the VG liquid. Thus for the VG condition 10 W was the minimum power used.