30 research outputs found

    Aggregation and settling in aqueous polydisperse alumina nanoparticle suspensions

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    Nanoparticle suspensions (also called nanofluids) are often polydisperse and tend to settle with time. Settling kinetics in these systems are known to be complex and hence challenging to understand. In this work, polydisperse spherical alumina (Al2O3) nanoparticles in the size range of ~10-100nm were dispersed in water and examined for aggregation and settling behaviour near its isoelectric point (IEP). A series of settling experiments were conducted and the results were analysed by photography and by Small Angle X-ray Scattering (SAXS). The settling curve obtained from standard bed height measurement experiments indicated two different types of behaviour, both of which were also seen in the SAXS data. But the SAXS data were remarkably able to pick out the rapid settling regime as a result of the high temporal resolution (10s) used. By monitoring the SAXS intensity, it was further possible to record the particle aggregation process for the first time. Optical microscopy images were produced on drying and dried droplets extracted from the suspension at various times. Dried deposits showed the rapid decrease in the number of very large particles with time which qualitatively validates the SAXS prediction, and therefore its suitability as a tool to study unstable polydisperse colloids. Keywords: Nanoparticles, nanofluids, polydisperse, aggregation, settling, alumina, microscopy, SAX

    Influence of the catalyst type on the growth of carbon nanotubes via methane chemical vapor deposition

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    The preparation of the catalyst is one of the key parameters which governs the quality of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) grown by catalyzed chemical vapor deposition (CVD). We investigated the influence of three different procedures of catalyst preparation on the type and diameter of CNTs formed under identical growth conditions via methane CVD. In the first one, chemically synthesized colloidal iron oxide or iron molybdenum alloy nanoparticles were used, which were homogeneously deposited on silicon substrates by spin coating to prevent them from coalescence under CVD growth conditions. The obtained multiwall CNTs (MWNTs) exhibited diameters corresponding to the catalyst particle size, whereas no formation of single-wall CNTs (SWNTs) was observed. In the second method, commercial porous alumina nanoparticles were used in association with iron and molybdenum salts and the Fe/Mo catalyst was formed in situ. We determined that the alumina concentration significantly influenced the morphology of the catalyst and that below a critical value of the range of 1 g/L no CNTs were formed. While yielding nearly defect-free SWNTs, their diameter could not be controlled using this procedure, resulting in a large distribution of tube sizes. In a third, new preparation method, associating alumina and iron-based nanoparticles, SWNTs of a different size and narrower diameter distribution as compared to the second method were obtained. Our results are evidence of the essential role of alumina particles in the formation of SWNTs, and the newly developed method opens up a way to the synthesis of diameter-controlled SWNTs via catalyzed CV
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