Liquid-fed Aerosol Reactors for One-step Synthesis of Nano-structured Particles

Aerosol technology is the key process for large-scale production of nano-structured materials such as carbon black, titania and silica. The understanding of gas-phase synthesis was transferred successfully from classic vapor-fed flames to liqu...

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Main Author: Lutz Mädler
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hosokawa Powder Technology Foundation 2014-03-01
Series:KONA Powder and Particle Journal
Online Access:https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/kona/22/0/22_2004014/_pdf/-char/en
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spelling doaj-ac4421692e144fb1b4dd12f3b57bfd1f2021-02-03T01:08:15ZengHosokawa Powder Technology FoundationKONA Powder and Particle Journal0288-45342187-55372014-03-0122010712010.14356/kona.2004014konaLiquid-fed Aerosol Reactors for One-step Synthesis of Nano-structured ParticlesLutz Mädler0Particle Technology Laboratory ETH ZürichAerosol technology is the key process for large-scale production of nano-structured materials such as carbon black, titania and silica. The understanding of gas-phase synthesis was transferred successfully from classic vapor-fed flames to liquid-fed aerosol reactors, enabling now also the one-step production of demanding and highly functional products. Such aerosol-derived nano-structured metal oxides, mixed metal oxides, and metals on metal oxides find application in the fields of catalysis, sensors, fillers, and electronics, and have advanced the research and development of these reactors in recent years. The four main spray methods include spray pyrolysis in a tubular reactor (SP), spray pyrolysis using a vapor flame reactor (VFSP), the emulsion combustion method (ECM) and flame spray pyrolysis (FSP). These methods are discussed and key concepts are compared such as the energy source driving the solvent/fuel evaporation and precursor reaction, final particle formation. Advances in fundamental understanding, scaling and simulation are highlighted. Specific strategies for the production of homogeneous products are presented in context with existing methods and specific applications. Finally, research needs are discussed with respect to new flame-made materials, instrumental strategies for their production and process optimization, including diagnostic techniques and process simulation.https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/kona/22/0/22_2004014/_pdf/-char/en
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lutz Mädler
spellingShingle Lutz Mädler
Liquid-fed Aerosol Reactors for One-step Synthesis of Nano-structured Particles
KONA Powder and Particle Journal
author_facet Lutz Mädler
author_sort Lutz Mädler
title Liquid-fed Aerosol Reactors for One-step Synthesis of Nano-structured Particles
title_short Liquid-fed Aerosol Reactors for One-step Synthesis of Nano-structured Particles
title_full Liquid-fed Aerosol Reactors for One-step Synthesis of Nano-structured Particles
title_fullStr Liquid-fed Aerosol Reactors for One-step Synthesis of Nano-structured Particles
title_full_unstemmed Liquid-fed Aerosol Reactors for One-step Synthesis of Nano-structured Particles
title_sort liquid-fed aerosol reactors for one-step synthesis of nano-structured particles
publisher Hosokawa Powder Technology Foundation
series KONA Powder and Particle Journal
issn 0288-4534
2187-5537
publishDate 2014-03-01
description Aerosol technology is the key process for large-scale production of nano-structured materials such as carbon black, titania and silica. The understanding of gas-phase synthesis was transferred successfully from classic vapor-fed flames to liquid-fed aerosol reactors, enabling now also the one-step production of demanding and highly functional products. Such aerosol-derived nano-structured metal oxides, mixed metal oxides, and metals on metal oxides find application in the fields of catalysis, sensors, fillers, and electronics, and have advanced the research and development of these reactors in recent years. The four main spray methods include spray pyrolysis in a tubular reactor (SP), spray pyrolysis using a vapor flame reactor (VFSP), the emulsion combustion method (ECM) and flame spray pyrolysis (FSP). These methods are discussed and key concepts are compared such as the energy source driving the solvent/fuel evaporation and precursor reaction, final particle formation. Advances in fundamental understanding, scaling and simulation are highlighted. Specific strategies for the production of homogeneous products are presented in context with existing methods and specific applications. Finally, research needs are discussed with respect to new flame-made materials, instrumental strategies for their production and process optimization, including diagnostic techniques and process simulation.
url https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/kona/22/0/22_2004014/_pdf/-char/en
work_keys_str_mv AT lutzmadler liquidfedaerosolreactorsforonestepsynthesisofnanostructuredparticles
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