Jüngst, Niklas; Südholt, Benjamin; Smallwood, Gregory J.; Schulz, Christof; Kaiser, Sebastian A.:
Laser-induced emission from iron oxide nanoparticles in spray-flame synthesis : In situ high-speed microscopy
In: Applied Physics B : Lasers and Optics, Vol. 130 (2024), No. 4, Article 63
2024article/chapter in journalOA Hybrid
Mechanical EngineeringFaculty of Engineering » Maschinenbau und Verfahrenstechnik » Institute for Energy and Materials Processes (EMPI)Scientific institutes » Center for Nanointegration Duisburg-Essen (CENIDE)
Related: 1 publication(s)
Title in English:
Laser-induced emission from iron oxide nanoparticles in spray-flame synthesis : In situ high-speed microscopy
Author:
Jüngst, NiklasUDE
GND
1241252629
LSF ID
58863
ORCID
0000-0002-6240-8322ORCID iD
Other
connected with university
corresponding author
;
Südholt, BenjaminUDE
LSF ID
63149
Other
connected with university
;
Smallwood, Gregory J.
;
Schulz, ChristofUDE
GND
1148037985
LSF ID
48807
ORCID
0000-0002-6879-4826ORCID iD
Other
connected with university
;
Kaiser, Sebastian A.UDE
GND
1298293995
LSF ID
52841
ORCID
0000-0002-9544-5728ORCID iD
Other
connected with university
Year of publication:
2024
Open Access?:
OA Hybrid
Scopus ID
Language of text:
English
Type of resource:
Text

Abstract in English:

Spray-flame synthesis uses low-cost precursors dissolved in organic solvents to produce functional metaloxide nanoparticles. In the spray flame, the precursor-laden droplets show frequent and intense thermally-induced disruption, so-called puffing and micro-explosion. This process is often correlated with high uniformity of particle sizes. Whether puffing and micro-explosion are also directly associated with the formation or release of iron oxide nanoparticles is not clear. Also, the spatiotemporal evolution of nanoparticles in the turbulent flow field of the flame is largely unknown from experiments. We performed simultaneous high-speed microscopic imaging of droplet shadowgraphs at 360 kHz as well as elastic light scattering (ELS) and laser-induced emission (LIE) of nanoparticles at 40 kHz. Comparing ELS and LIE images allows distinguishing signals from droplets, flame, and nanoparticles, as only the nanoparticles will appear in images from both methods. ELS and LIE show nanoparticles as thin narrow filaments, presumably following the local flow. Nanoparticle filaments are found at a height of 50 mm and more above the burner in the spray flame. The filaments show increasing LIE signal and higher confinement with increasing height above the burner. The appearance of LIE and thus nanoparticles does not directly correlate with the presence of droplets or their disruption.