4.6 Article

The size distributions of nanoparticles of the oxides of Mg, Ba and Al in flames: Their measurement and dependence on the concentrations of free radicals in the flame

Journal

PROCEEDINGS OF THE COMBUSTION INSTITUTE
Volume 31, Issue -, Pages 1939-1945

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.proci.2006.07.137

Keywords

combustion synthesis; nanoparticles; inorganic soots; flame-sampling; particle size distributions

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Flat, pre mixed, laminar, and very O-2-rich flames of C2H2 + O-2 + N-2 with [O-2]/[O-2](stoich) similar to 2.8 and a temperature similar to 2000 K have been burned at atmospheric pressure. Trace amounts (similar to 13 ppm) of the metals Mg, Ba or Al were added to the unburnt gases by nebulising an aqueous solution of a halide of the metal, so that e.g., Mg formed molecules of Mg(OH)(2), MgOH and MgO, as well as free atoms of Mg. The relative abundances of these species were governed by well-characterised equilibria and consequently depended on the temperature and also the concentrations of the flame's free radicals H, OH and L. Transmission electron microscopy showed that nanoparticles of the oxides of these metals formed from their pool of molecular species in these flames. Particle size distributions were also measured (much less tediously) with a mobility analyser (DMS 500, Cambustion) operating at 0.25 bara. The optimal way of continuously sampling the gases at a point along the flame's axis was investigated and shown to require expanding the sample (to a pressure of similar to 1/3 bara) supersonically through an orifice with a diameter greater than 0.4 mm. In addition, the sample had to be diluted with N-2, with a volumetric flow rate of similar to 10-20 times that of the sample, all at 1/3 bara. The sizes of oxide nanoparticles, as measured by transmission electron microscopy, agreed with the values of 6-10 nm from the mobility analyser. With Mg all the metal appeared very rapidly as nearly spherical nanoparticles of MgO early in a flame's reaction zone. This was also true for Ba, which, according to thermodynamic considerations at the final temperature of the flame, should not form any particles of BaO. That particles do actually form is due to the reaction zone having a relatively low temperature and super-equilibrium concentrations of the free radicals H, OH and O. Aluminium was expected to form particles of Al2O3. However, only a small fraction of the Al formed particles; this is attributed to the production of gas-phase molecules of Al2O3 (i,e., the nuclei) from AlO and AlO2 being by a relatively slow three-body reaction, as well as Al2O3 being a very minor member of the gas-phase pool of molecular species containing Al. (c) 2006 The Combustion Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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