Educ. Reso. for Part. Techn. 014Q-Nelson
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Copyright © 2001 Ralph Nelson, Licensed to ERPT

Dispersing Powders in Liquids, Part 1, by Ralph D. Nelson, Jr.

-- 5: Surface Contours --


The development of sophisticated computer programs for evaluating photographs of the contours of particles gave shape analysis a resurgence in popularity. A more complete discussion of the mathematical analysis of shape in terms of conventional shape and roughness measures and also of fractal geometry may be found in Allen\dag. The following section discusses a few aspects of shape that affect dispersions.

Shape

Although many of the equations in dispersion science are written in terms of spheres or cubes, most fundamental and agglomerated particles are not simple shapes. Spheres are the most preferred shapes for industrial products because they pack to a higher density, flow better, and have lower surfactant demand than other shape that encloses the same equal volume.

The simplest way to adjust an equation (that was written to describe the behavior of spheres) for nonsphericity is to use a shape factor to correct the length, area, or volume measures. Characterization of commercial powders and slurries is difficult because of the broad distribution of particle volumes and shapes within a batch of commercial powder and the all-to-frequent lack of reproducibility of these volume and shape distributions from batch to batch.

Small amounts of impurities or dispersants may adsorb on the crystal faces, affecting not only the volume and shape of the fundamental particles, but also the way in which they agglomerate into higher level structures. If a crystal has two fast-growing and one slow-growing face, the fast-growing faces will rapidly grow outward to form the long axis of a needle-shaped crystal. The slow-growing faces end up having the largest surface areas. Considerable technical effort has been spent finding out how to control particle shape by adding ions or surfactants that adsorb on and retard the growth of different crystal faces.

Shape affects the way particles respond to instruments designed to measure their size. For example, spheres will scatter light differently than needles of the same volume. Shape also affects the balance of forces that control the interactions of particles. For example, if one face of a crystal is positively charged and another face is negatively charged, the agglomerative forces will be stronger if the particles are cubes than if they are needles. The small ends cannot hold much charge and thus cannot have a strong attraction to the oppositely charged sides of the needle.


Surface Roughness

Surface roughness is a major factor in reducing particle attraction, since only smooth surfaces can come close enough over large areas to allow strong bonding. In rare cases, the surface irregularities between two particles will mesh, but it is difficult to control particle formation well enough to manufacture such a meshing structure. Surface roughness also increases dispersant demand, and since the initially added dispersant adsorbs in the valleys, where it is not very effective in preventing particle agglomeration, small amounts of dispersant are less effective for rough particles than for smooth particles.

Porosity

If a particle contains pores large enough to permit entry of the surfactant, then porosity creates extra demand for dispersant (beyond that required to treat the external surface). Since the pores can attract the surfactant from all sides, they usually adsorb surfactant more strongly than the outer surface, so the first dispersant adsorbed is lost inside the particle and contributes nothing to the interaction between particles.

Heterogeneous Solids

The preceding discussion assumed that the particles were either homogeneous or were uniformly coated with a second material. In many industrial situations this is not the case. Variations in the composition of a solid may arise from inhomogeneous distribution of a minor component in a solid state mix or from the presence of a second phase -- either as a second set of particles or as the cement between the particles. Such inhomogeneities lead to more varied interactions than are possible for a homogeneous solid.

It is harder to manufacture a heterogeneous solid with a specific structure than to produce homogeneous solids, because we must now control several different chemical additions and several precipitations (in parallel or in sequence) rather than just one. A heterogeneous powder may be a mix of particles having different densities, optical adsorptivities, refractive indices, x-ray attenuation factors, and shapes. A particle size measuring device may respond differently to two particles having the same mass and shape, but having two different compositions. Microscopy can help in determining whether heterogeneity is present in a sample .


Varieties of Heterogeneity

A commercial slurry of rutile (one of the several crystalline forms of TiO2) particles may contain aluminum in a variety of chemical forms:
      an aluminum ion in solution -- Al+++
      a complex with another ion in solution -- AlOH++, AlCl4-
      a solid oxide -- -Al2O3, -Al2O3
      a solid hydroxide -- boehmite AlOOH, gibbsite Al(OH)3

each of which may be found in a variety of physical situations
      substituted or occluded inside a rutile particle
      anchored as a coating on a rutile particle surface
      adsorbed on the rutile particle surface
      as separate particles in a physical mix with the rutile particles


Distribution of Heterogeneity

The second material (causing heterogeneity) may be uniformly distributed within the particle, or it may be concentrated near the surface or in pores and crevices. The mass percent of the second material may be uniform from one particle to the next or may vary widely.

A coating may be of uniform thickness or may be present as islands on the surface. If the coating thickness or the amount of surfactant adsorbed per unit area is the same for small particles as for large particles, then small particles will contain a higher mass percent of the second material than the larger ones do. Changes in solution conditions from one batch to the next may strongly affect the amount of second material precipitated or adsorbed. Abrasion of a coating may knock off small particles of pure coating. Since these have properties different from the coated particles, their fouling, settling, and elution properties will be different from the coated particles.


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