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  4. Precipitation of Nanosized and Nanostructured Powders: Process Intensification and Scale-Out Using a Segmented Flow Tubular Reactor (SFTR)
 
research article

Precipitation of Nanosized and Nanostructured Powders: Process Intensification and Scale-Out Using a Segmented Flow Tubular Reactor (SFTR)

Aimable, Anne  
•
Jongen, Nathalie  
•
Testino, Andrea
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2011
Chemical Engineering Technology

The successful scale-out and process intensification using a segmented flow tubular reactor (SFTR) for ultrafine CaCO3, BaTiO3, and nanosized ZnO from optimized minibatch (20 mL) conditions is presented. The capacity of the SFTR in process intensification was demonstrated by producing ∼ 5 kg batches of BaTiO3 powders with excellent batch-to-batch reproducibility. The SFTR scale-out or numbering-up capacity was demonstrated for a nanostructured CaCO3 in 500 g batches by scaling-out from one to six segmented flow tubular reactors run in parallel (scale-out/-up ratio of 5000 compared to lab batch experiments). The SFTR was then used to demonstrate its potential for nanosized ZnO powders producing 50 g lots of these nanopowders in a continuous process, a scale-out/-up ratio of 250 compared to lab batch experiments without any loss of powder quality. The SFTR allows a precise control of precipitation conditions, leading to an excellent reproducibility in powder characteristics, and shows great promise as a simple production process of powders and advanced nanomaterials with highly controlled properties.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1002/ceat.201000324
Web of Science ID

WOS:000288092100003

Author(s)
Aimable, Anne  
Jongen, Nathalie  
Testino, Andrea
Donnet, Marcel  
Lemaître, Jacques  
Hofmann, Heinrich  
Bowen, Paul  
Date Issued

2011

Published in
Chemical Engineering Technology
Volume

34

Issue

3

Start page

344

End page

352

Subjects

Nanoparticles

•

Plug flow

•

Precipitation

•

Segmented flow tubular reactor

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
LTP  
Available on Infoscience
July 5, 2011
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/69350
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