A Double Closed-Loop Process for Nanoparticle Synthesis via Aerosol Mixing and Venturi Jet Scrubbing
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials, Methods and Experimental Setup
2.1. Chemicals and Reaction Scheme
2.2. Characterisation Techniques
2.3. The Experimental Setup
- -
- A glass vessel, whose upper flange is crossed by a water supply line, a water outlet line and a Venturi nozzle outlet line. From this point on, this vessel will be named the “Venturi vessel” to avoid confusion with the aerosoliser container, called the “atomising vessel”
- -
- A Venturi nozzle, whose outlet pipe draws directly into the vessel.
- -
- A five-chamber diaphragm pump (Seaflo, 24 V, 240 W) for circulating the water phase, operating at a maximum outlet pressure of 4 bar. This pump draws water from the vessel and sends it to the Venturi reactor inlet.
- -
- An analogic manometer measuring water pressure at the Venturi reactor inlet;
- -
- Two ultrasonic aerosolisers, each one comprising a reservoir (the atomising vessel) containing chemical reagents A and B indicated in Equation (2), namely one reagent for each aerosoliser, equipped with an inlet and outlet duct. The former receives the outgoing air from the Venturi vessel; the latter conveys the gaseous stream containing the liquid droplets into a T-junction where the outgoing streams from each aerosoliser merge together. This T-shaped device acts as a chemical reactor, promoting the coalescence between droplets containing two different reagents, thus forming bigger droplets containing NPs of the product C.
- -
- A boosting gas compressor (Tungfull Digital Technology, Shenzhen, China, 24 V, 10 W), operating with adjustable flow rate, is located on the gas line between the outlet of the Venturi vessel and the inlet of the two aerosolisers. Its purpose is to improve the circulation of the gas stream by counteracting pressure drops in the gas line. The compressor motor is equipped with a dedicated, custom-made water-cooling coil.
- -
- Two adjustable DC power suppliers (Longwei, LW-K3010D; 0–30 V; 300 W) were adopted. One of the two is used to run the water circulation pump in the Venturi nozzle, while the other powers the boosting compressor mentioned in the previous point.
- -
- One fixed DC power supplier (5 V; 20 W) to power the electrical circuit of each atomiser and the relevant cooling fan.
- -
- A closed-loop water circulation to ensure the operation of the Venturi nozzle, whose sole purpose is to capture the liquid droplets coming from the T-joint and containing NPs of product C;
- -
- A closed-loop gas stream, exiting the vessel and forming two gas currents of equal flow rate entering the aerosolisers.
- -
- One of the two capacitor armatures has been coated with insulation paint to minimise electrical conduction between the armatures and the liquid drops.
- -
- The electrical connections between the armatures and the external circuit were redesigned to make them as far apart as possible. This is to avoid possible short circuits between electric terminals, induced by contact with the conductive solution.
- -
- The driver module of Figure 5a has been mounted on suitable supports connected to heat sinks with forced ventilation, adopting a solution similar to cooling systems for computer CPUs.
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Synthesis by Direct Ultrasonic Aerosolisation and Comparison with Non-Aerosolised Synthesis
- (1)
- Start the flow of liquid into the Venturi collector circuit, keeping the air compressor supplying the aerosolizers off.
- (2)
- Raise the water pressure at the Venturi nozzle inlet by increasing the supply voltage of the liquid pump, up to a value that allows the Venturi nozzle suction to be triggered. Generally, a liquid pressure of 1.5 bar is sufficient and higher values are useless, as they may overload the liquid pump without increasing the effectiveness of NP abatement.
- (3)
- Turn on the gas compressor and adjust its supply voltage so that the downstream compressor flow rate of gas does not exceed 6 L/min. Higher flow values may interfere with the operation of the Venturi nozzle.
3.2. NP Yield and Related Energy Demand
4. Conclusions
- -
- The use of two closed circuits, both gas- and liquid-tight, allows minimising NP dispersions in the surrounding environment. For this reason, this technique may be advantageously proposed in the synthesis of toxic or noxious NPs.
- -
- As a consequence of the previous point, this synthesis process may be carried out in the presence of an inert gas, as a further possible extension of this method, without the need to replace gas leaks. For this reason, the present process may be economically attractive. Additionally, this aspect is of primary importance in the case of reactive NPs, like non-noble metal NPs, often requiring an inert atmosphere.
- -
- The synthesis of NPs is carried out at room temperature, with positive effects in the synthesis of thermolabile NPs. No additional energy consumption and/or severe experimental conditions were needed, thus fulfilling inherent safety criteria for the process route and operator hazard exposure.
- -
- This technique allowed obtaining inorganic NPs, avoiding contamination by surfactant or capping agents, usually adopted in wet chemical synthesis. For this reason, the present method lends itself to the production of NPs for theranostic uses, where the presence of additional compounds on the NPs’ surfaces is often undesired.
- -
- All other conditions being equal, especially in the absence of capping agents, the NPs synthesised here by direct aerosolisation proved to have a diameter dispersion narrower than those obtained by a wet chemical method based on liquid mixing.
Author Contributions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Setup Component | Set Value |
---|---|
Venturi vessel total volume | 1000 [cm3] |
Liquid holdup inside the vessel | 500 [cm3] |
Total circulating liquid volume V0 | 600 [cm3] |
Maximum liquid holdup in each atomiser | 20 [cm3] |
Liquid pressure at the Venturi reactor inlet | 1.5 [bar] |
Volumetric gas flow rate at a single aerosoliser inlet | 50 [cm3/s] |
Na2CO3 and CaCl2 concentration in aerosolisers | C0; C0/4 [M] |
Sample Type | Synthesis Method | Precursors Concentrations |
---|---|---|
AER-1 | Direct aerosolisation | 0.472 M |
AER-2 | Direct aerosolisation | 0.118 M |
STR-1 | Impulsive mixing in stirred tank | 0.472 M |
STR-2 | Impulsive mixing in stirred tank | 0.118 M |
Sample Type | Average Diameter (nm) | Standard Deviation (nm) |
---|---|---|
AER-1 | 34 | 6 |
AER-2 | 52 | 9 |
STR-1 | 342 (microparticles) | 105 |
STR-2 | 697 (microparticles) | 118 |
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Fabiano, B.; Salerno, M.; Vocciante, M.; Soda, O.; Reverberi, A.P. A Double Closed-Loop Process for Nanoparticle Synthesis via Aerosol Mixing and Venturi Jet Scrubbing. Appl. Sci. 2025, 15, 7693. https://doi.org/10.3390/app15147693
Fabiano B, Salerno M, Vocciante M, Soda O, Reverberi AP. A Double Closed-Loop Process for Nanoparticle Synthesis via Aerosol Mixing and Venturi Jet Scrubbing. Applied Sciences. 2025; 15(14):7693. https://doi.org/10.3390/app15147693
Chicago/Turabian StyleFabiano, Bruno, Marco Salerno, Marco Vocciante, Omar Soda, and Andrea Pietro Reverberi. 2025. "A Double Closed-Loop Process for Nanoparticle Synthesis via Aerosol Mixing and Venturi Jet Scrubbing" Applied Sciences 15, no. 14: 7693. https://doi.org/10.3390/app15147693
APA StyleFabiano, B., Salerno, M., Vocciante, M., Soda, O., & Reverberi, A. P. (2025). A Double Closed-Loop Process for Nanoparticle Synthesis via Aerosol Mixing and Venturi Jet Scrubbing. Applied Sciences, 15(14), 7693. https://doi.org/10.3390/app15147693