2017 Annual Meeting
(206f) Sedimentation of Agglomerates Consisting of Polydisperse Nanoparticles
Authors
Anastasia Spyrogianni,1 Katerina S. Karadima,2,3 Eirini Goudeli,1 Vlasis G. Mavrantzas1-3 and Sotiris E. Pratsinis1
1Department of Mechanical and Process Engineering, ETH Zurich, Zurich, 8092, Switzerland
2Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Patras, Patras, 26504, Greece
3Institute of Chemical Engineering Sciences, FORTH/ICE-HT, Patras, 26504, Greece
The precipitation of agglomerates is of interest in water cleaning, pharmaceutical processing, nanotoxicology1 and nanomedicine as well as for the stability of engineered nanofluids. Here, the mobility of nanosized fractal-like SiO2 agglomerates in water is investigated and their settling rate in infinitely dilute suspensions is calculated by thoroughly validated Brownian dynamics (BD) tracking the agglomerate translational and rotational dynamics by a Cartesian vector formalism. Agglomerates are generated by an event-driven method2 and have constant mass fractal dimension of 1.80 ± 0.01 but varying primary particle (PP) size distribution, mass and relative shape anisotropy. The calculated diffusion coefficient tensor is used to obtain their mobility diameter dm, which is in excellent agreement with the dm from scaling laws for fractal-like agglomerates. The agglomerate mobility to gyration diameter ratio, dm/dg, decreases with increasing relative shape anisotropy κ2. For constant dm, the agglomerate settling rate, us, increases with increasing PP diameter and geometric standard deviation Ïp,g (polydispersity). A linear relationship between us and agglomerate mass to mobility diameter ratio, m/dm, is revealed leading to an analytical expression for calculation of us for agglomerates consisting of polydisperse PPs. The latter shows that the commonly-made assumption of monodisperse PPs underestimates us by a fraction depending on Ïp,g and the agglomerate mass mobility exponent. The simulations are in excellent agreement with precipitation rate measurements of commercial fumed SiO2 agglomerates in water1.
1. Spyrogianni, A.; Sotiriou, G. A.; Brambilla, D.; Leroux, J.-C.; Pratsinis, S. E. The effect of settling on cytotoxicity evaluation of SiO2 nanoparticles. J. Aerosol Sci.108, 56â66 (2017).
2. Goudeli, E.; Eggersdorfer, M.L.; Pratsinis, S.E. Coagulation â Agglomeration of Fractal-like Particles: Structure and Self-Preserving Size Distribution, Langmuir, 31, 1320-1327 (2015).