Hello, I am likely going to be painfully ignorant for all of you to cringe here, sorry about that, but hopefully someone will be polite enough to help me out.
I am interested in getting myself a specific model of an electronic cigarette and I have recently found out it operates at 3.7 volts. This raises a concern.
A while back, there has been a study on formaldehyde production during the vaping process at 5 volts, which is absurdly high for electronic cigarettes and almost nobody has that setting on a daily basis (tends to generate a "dry puff", which is everything but pleasant). In the same study, they mentioned they detected no formaldehyde at 3.3 volts, which I have been using as a safety reference. However, they did not discuss any other voltage level between these two.
I have read the rules entirely and I did not seem to find any that disallows me from giving an external source, so this is the study I am talking about:
http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMc1413069If I missed something, sorry.
In any case, would 0.4 volts of difference be enough to start formaldehyde production?
Thanks!