화학공학소재연구정보센터
Plasma Chemistry and Plasma Processing, Vol.31, No.6, 851-866, 2011
Carbon Nanoparticle Production by Inductively Coupled Thermal Plasmas: Controlling the Thermal History of Particle Nucleation
The process control for reproducibility, uniformity, and achievement of desired structures for carbon black generated in thermal plasma devices is studied in this paper through modeling, and correlated with experimental results. A numerical simulation of the flow and energy fields, stream function lines and the quench rates of the plasma gas in a conical shape reactor at different pressures was made. An argon plasma is used with highly diluted methane (0.6-7%) as the carbon precursor. The quench rates were studied in order to observe the flow development and hence the thermal history of particle nucleation. Three pressure cases of 20.7, 55.2 and 101.3 kPa and two plasma powers cases of 10 and 20 kW were studied. The modeling results enabled carbon nanoflakes production in the experimental tests performed on an inductively coupled thermal plasma system. Results indicate a robust process control enabling very little particle morphology variation over this wide range of reactor pressure values and varying plasma power, and a very high reproducibility of the particle morphologies obtained.