Influence of flame stability on iron oxide nanoparticle growth during FSP

被引:1
|
作者
Kennedy, Callum M. [1 ]
Zhang, Yilong [1 ]
Zou, Sibei [1 ]
Dunn, Matthew J. [1 ]
Masri, Assaad R. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Sydney, Sch Aerosp Mech & Mechatron Engn, Darlington, NSW 2008, Australia
关键词
Flame spray pyrolysis; Flame stability; Thermophoretic sampling; Flame synthesis; PARTICLES; MORPHOLOGY; PYROLYSIS; EVOLUTION; MAGHEMITE;
D O I
10.1016/j.jaerosci.2024.106475
中图分类号
TQ [化学工业];
学科分类号
0817 ;
摘要
Flame stability during flame spray pyrolysis (FSP) remains an active topic of investigation due to its impact on synthesised particle attributes and purity. The unique feature of the burner investigated here is the ability to control flame stability over newly defined stability maps. The novelty of the current work lies in understanding the influence of these broad stability modes on nanoparticle growth during FSP and on the attributes of collected products. Several distinct flame configurations are selected for iron oxide nanoparticle synthesis, ranging from stable to highly unstable flames. The flame stability regimes are characterised by OH* chemiluminescence and broadband flame luminescence imaging. Stability is correlated with the coefficient of variation of flame luminescence (CV) and flame height with mean OH* chemiluminescence. Planar Mie scattering is then used to identify the effect of flame luminescence intermittency on spray atomisation and evaporation quality. For particle analysis, in-situ thermophoretic sampling is performed from 30 to 200 mm above the burner exit plane and analysed via transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Further ex-situ analysis is also performed on the bulk-collected product via high-resolution TEM, X-ray powder diffraction (XRD), and attenuated total reflectance Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR). It is demonstrated that flames with higher instability (CVmin >= 0.35) maintain increased spray heights (>26 %) and reduced flame heights (>79 %) compared to stable flames with the same precursor volume flowrate. This reduces the hightemperature particle residence time for primary particle growth and impacts subsequent agglomeration. For example, the mean diameter of gyration and primary particle diameter are found to vary by 44 % and 29 % depending on the flame regime, respectively. Ex-situ analysis also demonstrates that the dominant iron oxide phase produced is maghemite regardless of the stability regime. However, higher concentrations of organic impurities including methyl, methylene and carboxylate functional groups are found via ATR-FTIR with increased flame instability (CV).
引用
收藏
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Optimizing iron powder combustion: Influence of particle size on flame stability, nanoparticle formation, and nitric oxide emission
    Prasidha, Willie
    Baigmohammadi, Mohammadreza
    Shoshin, Yuriy
    de Goey, Philip
    COMBUSTION AND FLAME, 2025, 275
  • [2] Influence of iron oleate complex structure on iron oxide nanoparticle formation
    Bronstein, Lyudmila M.
    Huang, Xinlei
    Retrum, John
    Schmucker, Abrin
    Pink, Maren
    Stein, Barry D.
    Dragnea, Bogdan
    CHEMISTRY OF MATERIALS, 2007, 19 (15) : 3624 - 3632
  • [3] Molecular dynamics simulation of iron nanoparticle sintering during flame synthesis
    Ngoc Ha Nguyen
    Richter Henning
    John Z. Wen
    Journal of Nanoparticle Research, 2011, 13 : 803 - 815
  • [4] Molecular dynamics simulation of iron nanoparticle sintering during flame synthesis
    Ngoc Ha Nguyen
    Henning, Richter
    Wen, John Z.
    JOURNAL OF NANOPARTICLE RESEARCH, 2011, 13 (02) : 803 - 815
  • [5] Intracellular iron oxide nanoparticle coating stability determines nanoparticle usability and cell functionality
    Soenen, S. J.
    Nuytten, N.
    Himmelreich, U.
    De Cuyper, M.
    DRUG DISCOVERY TODAY, 2010, 15 (23-24) : 1082 - 1082
  • [6] The influence of trace water concentration on iron oxide nanoparticle size
    Macdonald, Janet E.
    Brooks, Christopher J.
    Veinot, Jonathan G. C.
    CHEMICAL COMMUNICATIONS, 2008, (32) : 3777 - 3779
  • [7] Magnetic Iron Oxide Nanoparticle Seeded Growth of Nucleotide Coordinated Polymers
    Liang, Hao
    Liu, Biwu
    Yuan, Qipeng
    Liu, Juewen
    ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES, 2016, 8 (24) : 15615 - 15622
  • [8] Continuous growth of iron-oxo clusters to iron oxide nanoparticles: Insights on iron oxide nanoparticle formation at the early stage
    Chang, Hogeun
    Hyeon, Taeghwan
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2019, 258
  • [9] Investigation and simulation of droplet breakup and iron oxide nanoparticle formation in spray-flame synthesis
    Skenderovic, Ivan
    Kruis, Frank Einar
    JOURNAL OF AEROSOL SCIENCE, 2025, 185
  • [10] The Influence of Nickel Oxide Nanoparticle Dispersion on the Thermo Stability of Lubricant Oil
    Ramachandran, K.
    Navaneethakrishnan, P.
    Sivaraja, M.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NANOSCIENCE, 2020, 19 (01)