Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4452684 Journal of Aerosol Science 2011 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

Aerosol techniques have recently been used to process natural products for medical, pharmaceutical, and environmental health applications. In particular, electrohydrodynamic spraying, or electrospraying, which is a method of atomizing liquids by means of electrical forces, is a promising aerosol technology because it generates non-agglomerated particles due to repulsive electrical forces between particles with unipolar charges. We investigated the characteristics of natural-product nanoparticles generated via electrospraying. A plant extract containing a natural-product (Sophora flavescens) was sprayed in steady cone-jet mode using a specially designed electrospray system with a point-to-orifice-plate configuration. The electrosprayed natural-product particles maintained their bimodal size distribution with good stability and uniformity for longer than 1 h. Compared to generation characteristics observed using a conventional nebulization process, the electrospray technique produced non-agglomerated, spherical particles and resulted in a narrow size range for both peaks. The size distribution of electrosprayed particles was controlled by varying the suspension flow rate of S. flavescens extract. Also, they had a high average charge per particle and positive polarity. The nanoparticles maintained the major chemical composition of the original S. flavescens ethanolic extract during electrospraying. Our investigation demonstrated that the electrospray process, driven by high-intensity electric fields, can be used to generate nanoscale particles from natural products.

► The characteristics of Sophora flavescens natural-product nanoparticles generated via electrospraying with steady cone-jet mode. ► The electrosprayed particles maintained their bimodal size distribution with good stability and uniformity. ► Compared to a conventional nebulization process, the electrospray technique produced non-agglomerated, spherical particles and resulted in a narrow size range for both peaks. ► The nanoparticles maintained the major chemical composition of the original S. flavescens ethanolic extract during electrospraying.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Atmospheric Science
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