Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4452731 Journal of Aerosol Science 2012 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

Flame aerosol synthesis is one of the commonly employed techniques for producing ultra fine particles of commodity chemicals such as titanium dioxide, silicon dioxide and carbon black. Large volumes of these materials are produced in industrial flame reactors. Particle size distribution of product powder is the most important variable and it depends strongly on flame dynamics inside the reactor, which in turn is a function of input process variables such as reactant flow rate and concentration, flow rates of air, fuel and the carrier gas and the burner geometry. A coupled flame dynamics–monodisperse population balance model for nanoparticle synthesis in an aerosol flame reactor is presented here. The flame dynamics was simulated using the commercial computational fluid dynamics software CFX and the particle population dynamics was represented using a monodisperse population balance model for continuous processes that predicts the evolution of particle number concentration, particle volume and surface area. The model was tested with published experimental data for synthesis of silica nanoparticles using different burner configurations and with different reactor operating conditions. The model predictions for radial flame temperature profiles and for the effects of process variables like precursor concentration and oxygen flow rate on particle specific surface area and mean diameter are in close agreement with published experimental data.

► Coupled flame dynamics–monodisperse PBM for nanoparticle synthesis in a flame reactor. ► Synthesis of silica nanoparticles in a five concentric tube burner. ► Accurate prediction of axial and radial temperature profiles. ► Effect of burner configuration on powder specific surface area predicted accurately. ► Accurate prediction for effect of process variables on powder specific surface area.

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