Spray drying and spray pyrolysis are powder preparation methods that involve atomizing a liquid solution and evaporating the liquid. Spray drying uses lower temperatures (below 300C) to evaporate the liquid, leaving dry particles. Spray pyrolysis uses higher temperatures (above 300C) and an oxidizing atmosphere to decompose the solution into the desired inorganic phase. Both methods can precisely control particle properties like size, composition, and morphology. Spray drying is commonly used to produce ceramic powders while spray pyrolysis allows synthesis of advanced ceramics and films.
Spray drying and spray pyrolysis are powder preparation methods that involve atomizing a liquid solution and evaporating the liquid. Spray drying uses lower temperatures (below 300C) to evaporate the liquid, leaving dry particles. Spray pyrolysis uses higher temperatures (above 300C) and an oxidizing atmosphere to decompose the solution into the desired inorganic phase. Both methods can precisely control particle properties like size, composition, and morphology. Spray drying is commonly used to produce ceramic powders while spray pyrolysis allows synthesis of advanced ceramics and films.
Spray drying and spray pyrolysis are powder preparation methods that involve atomizing a liquid solution and evaporating the liquid. Spray drying uses lower temperatures (below 300C) to evaporate the liquid, leaving dry particles. Spray pyrolysis uses higher temperatures (above 300C) and an oxidizing atmosphere to decompose the solution into the desired inorganic phase. Both methods can precisely control particle properties like size, composition, and morphology. Spray drying is commonly used to produce ceramic powders while spray pyrolysis allows synthesis of advanced ceramics and films.
Spray drying and spray pyrolysis are powder preparation methods that involve atomizing a liquid solution and evaporating the liquid. Spray drying uses lower temperatures (below 300C) to evaporate the liquid, leaving dry particles. Spray pyrolysis uses higher temperatures (above 300C) and an oxidizing atmosphere to decompose the solution into the desired inorganic phase. Both methods can precisely control particle properties like size, composition, and morphology. Spray drying is commonly used to produce ceramic powders while spray pyrolysis allows synthesis of advanced ceramics and films.
• evaporation of the liquid bring a solution to supersaturation, thereby causing the nucleation and growth of particles • Commonly aqueous solutions of metal salts used • Sulfates and chlorides are often used because of their high solubility • Maximum temperature (typically less than 300C) • Key solution parameters -size of the droplet, concentration and composition of the metal salt • Advantages: High purity, small particle size, composition control, chemical homogeneity • Disadvantage: Expensive, poor for nonoxides, powder agglomeration commonly a problem Spray Drying •A solution is broken up into fine droplets by a fluid atomizer and sprayed into a drying chamber •Contact between the spray and drying medium (commonly hot air) leads to evaporation of moisture. •The product, consisting of dry particles of the metal salt, is carried out in the air stream leaving the chamber and collected using a bag collector or a cyclone. Spray Drying
• A variety of atomizers are available
• Rotary atomization (centrifugal atomization) – liquid is centrifugally accelerated to high velocity by a spinning disk • Pressure atomization, pressure nozzles atomize the solution by accelerating it through a large pressure difference and injecting it into the chamber. • Pneumatic atomization occurs when the solution is impacted by a stream of high-speed gas from a nozzle. • Ultrasonic atomization involves passing the solution over a piezoelectric device that is vibrating rapidly. Spray Drying
• Droplet sizes ranging from less than 10 µm to over 100 µm
can be produced by these atomizers. • Under suitable conditions, spherical agglomerates with a primary particle size of 0.1 µm or less can be obtained • Temperature in the drying chamber is commonly insufficient to cause decomposition of salt or solid-state reaction. • Hence, additional processing steps such as calcination and milling become essential. • E.g. Ni-Zn ferrite • Used to produce pressing-grade ceramic powders and for numerous other applications in the foods, chemicals, and materials industries Spray Pyrolysis (spray roasting, spray reaction, or evaporative decomposition of solutions)
• Describe all synthesis processes in which a solution is
atomized and thermolyzed to attain the requisite phase • By using a higher temperature and a reactive (e.g., oxidizing) atmosphere in the chamber, solutions of metal salts can be dried and decomposed directly in a single step. • Mixed metal oxide, non-oxide, and composite particles that are solid, hollow, porous, or fibrous can be produced by modifying the precursor characteristics, solution properties, and process parameters • Controlled synthesis of advanced ceramic powders and films is possible. Pyrolysis (i.e., thermal decomposition) Oxidation, nitridation, or reduction-based thermal processes are also included Spray Pyrolysis • Differs from spray drying in the use of solutions, the consequent process of precipitation or condensation within a droplet, and the use of significantly higher temperatures (e.g., >3OOoC) to form the desired inorganic phase by thermolysis. •Solution is atomized into a series of reactors (Fig. 1) where the aerosol droplets undergo evaporation and solute condensation within the droplet, drying, thermolysis of the precipitate particle at higher temperature to form a microporous particle, and, finally, sintering of the microporous particle to form a dense particle. •Uniquely control the particle formation environment by compartmentalizing the solution into droplets. In this manner, SP ensures complete stoichiometry retention on the droplet scale Mechanism
Droplet undergoes evaporation and the solute concentration in the outer layer increases above the supersaturation Limit
Precipitation of fine particles.
Precipitation is followed by a drying stage in which the vapor diffuse through
the pores in the precipitated layer.
Decomposition of the precipitated salts produces a porous particle made up of
very fine grains
Finally heated to produce a dense particle
Variety of particle morphologies produced
For the fabrication of
advanced ceramics, dense particles are preferred over those with highly porous or hollow shell-like morphologies because a subsequent milling step is normally unnecessary. Zirconyl hydroxychloride (ZHC) If dense particles are required, we must first achieve homogeneous nucleation and growth in the droplet (volume precipitation)
Facilitated by a small droplet size and
slow drying
A large difference between the
supersaturation concentration Css and the saturation concentration Cs of the solute in solution increases the nucleation rate (Lamer diagram)
A high Cs (i.e., a high solute solubility)
and a positive temperature coefficient of solute solubility desired so that sufficient solute is available to form filled agglomerates of touching primary particles.
Precipiitated solids should not be
thermoplastic or melt during the decomposition stage Drying of a droplet containing fine precipitates • Drying of a droplet containing fine precipitates is quite different from that of a liquid droplet. • Fine precipitates provide a resistance to the mass transport of the solvent vapor • If the temperature of the drying chamber is too high, boiling of the solution may occur leading to inflation or disintegration of the droplet. • Combination of fine pores between the precipitates and rapid drying of the droplet can lead to high capillary stresses and fracture of the particle • It is important to achieve complete decomposition of the dried salts prior to sintering. Types of solutions used • Laboratory scale-nitrates and acetates are preferable to sulfates because of their lower decomposition temperatures • However, acetates have a low solubility, while nitrates, acetates and sulfates can introduce impurities into the powder. • Chlorides and oxychlorides are used industrially because of their high solubilities, but the corrosive nature of the gases produced during decomposition and the deleterious effect of residual chlorine on subsequent sintering is problematic. • The particles should be sintered in situ to take full advantage of the spray pyrolysis process. • The fine pores between the primary particles and the short interparticle collision time in the process favor the formation of dense individual particles if exposure to a high enough temperature can be achieved. Spray Drying of Suspensions Spray drying of suspensions is used on a large scale industrially for granulating fine powders to control their flow and compaction characteristics during die pressing
liquid is removed in such a
way as to limit the agglomeration of the dried powder to a scale equal to or less than the size of the droplet.
Limiting scale of the agglomeration
provide benefits like better overall uniformity of the compacted body