2020 Virtual AIChE Annual Meeting
(84a) Characterizing Changes in Powder and Surface Adhesion Using the Enhanced Centrifuge Method
Authors
This work focuses on developing an experimental and modeling framework that maps particle-scale and surface properties onto experimentally-validated âeffectiveâ Hamaker constant distributions that describe van der Waals adhesion forces between particles in powders. These distributions represent an engineering approach that allows powders comprised of particles of complex shape and roughness, which are challenging to model, to be described as if they were perfect, smooth spheres, which are comparatively simple to model. The complexity associated with the shape and size distributions of the individual particles is captured by the âeffectiveâ Hamaker constants. This prior work is extended here to investigate the effects of topographical changes on the adhesion force distribution of powders against different surfaces and to characterize the powder behavior and resulting effective Hamaker constant distributions. These size-dependent effective Hamaker constant distributions provide a quantifiable measure of the change in the powder and surface adhesion that reflects the size, shape, and topographical features on the powder and surface with which it interacts.