Literature DB >> 25560979

Coagulation-agglomeration of fractal-like particles: structure and self-preserving size distribution.

Eirini Goudeli1, Maximilian L Eggersdorfer, Sotiris E Pratsinis.   

Abstract

Agglomeration occurs in environmental and industrial processes, especially at low temperatures where particle sintering or coalescence is rather slow. Here, the growth and structure of particles undergoing agglomeration (coagulation in the absence of coalescence, condensation, or surface growth) are investigated from the free molecular to the continuum regime by discrete element modeling (DEM). Particles coagulating in the free molecular regime follow ballistic trajectories described by an event-driven method, whereas in the near-continuum (gas-slip) and continuum regimes, Langevin dynamics describe their diffusive motion. Agglomerates containing about 10-30 primary particles, on the average, attain their asymptotic fractal dimension, D(f), of 1.91 or 1.78 by ballistic or diffusion-limited cluster-cluster agglomeration, corresponding to coagulation in the free molecular or continuum regimes, respectively. A correlation is proposed for the asymptotic evolution of agglomerate D(f) as a function of the average number of constituent primary particles, n̅(p). Agglomerates exhibit considerably broader self-preserving size distribution (SPSD) by coagulation than spherical particles: the number-based geometric standard deviations of the SPSD agglomerate radius of gyration in the free molecular and continuum regimes are 2.27 and 1.95, respectively, compared to ∼1.45 for spheres. In the transition regime, agglomerates exhibit a quasi-SPSD whose geometric standard deviation passes through a minimum at Knudsen number Kn ≈ 0.2. In contrast, the asymptotic D(f) shifts linearly from 1.91 in the free molecular regime to 1.78 in the continuum regime. Population balance models using the radius of gyration as collision radius underestimate (up to about 80%) the small tail of the SPSD and slightly overpredict the overall agglomerate coagulation rate, as they do not account for cluster interpenetration during coagulation. In the continuum regime, when a recently developed agglomeration rate is used in population balance equations, the resulting SPSD is in excellent agreement with that obtained by DEM.

Year:  2015        PMID: 25560979     DOI: 10.1021/la504296z

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Langmuir        ISSN: 0743-7463            Impact factor:   3.882


  4 in total

1.  Size, composition, morphology, and health implications of airborne incidental metal-containing nanoparticles.

Authors:  Natalia I Gonzalez-Pech; Larissa V Stebounova; Irem B Ustunol; Jae Hong Park; T Renee Anthony; Thomas M Peters; Vicki H Grassian
Journal:  J Occup Environ Hyg       Date:  2019-03-14       Impact factor: 2.155

2.  A Thermodynamically Consistent, Microscopically-Based, Model of the Rheology of Aggregating Particles Suspensions.

Authors:  Soham Jariwala; Norman J Wagner; Antony N Beris
Journal:  Entropy (Basel)       Date:  2022-05-17       Impact factor: 2.738

3.  Light Extinction by Agglomerates of Gold Nanoparticles: A Plasmon Ruler for Sub-10 nm Interparticle Distances.

Authors:  Georgios A Kelesidis; Daniel Gao; Fabian H L Starsich; Sotiris E Pratsinis
Journal:  Anal Chem       Date:  2022-03-21       Impact factor: 6.986

4.  Estimating Respirable Dust Exposure from Inhalable Dust Exposure.

Authors:  Cornelia Wippich; Jörg Rissler; Dorothea Koppisch; Dietmar Breuer
Journal:  Ann Work Expo Health       Date:  2020-04-30       Impact factor: 2.179

  4 in total

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