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High-quality
nanopowders made of refractory ceramics are a rare
and very expensive material. All known methods of
their manufacturing face the same problems - scanty
quantities, extensive variety of particle sizes and
expensive production. Researchers from the town of
Tomsk have invented and manufactured a device to produce
a choice selection of particles – all particles are
equal to the required size and inexpensive. The project
has been funded by two foundations – the Russian Foundation
for Basic Research and the Foundation for Promotion
of Small-Scale Enterprises Development in Scientific
and Technological Area.
Researchers of the Tomsk State University jointly
with their colleagues from the MIPOR research-and-production
association have designed a device and manufactured
with its help pilot lots of some nanopowders, including
the silicon powder and the silicium nitride and silicon
carbide powders. The project has been funded by two
foundations – the Russian Foundation for Basic Research
and the Foundation for Promotion of Small-Scale Enterprises
Development in Scientific and Technological Area.
The action of a new device
is based on the method the researchers called “self-abrasion”.
In the device, the fluid jet captures the particles
and brings them upwards to the separation zone at
the velocity close to the transsonic speed. The centrifugal
separator separates off the thin fraction, i.e. the
smallest particles. Heavy and large particles fall
back to the pounding zone. The streams meet each other,
but their velocities are different: they fly up at
a high speed and fall down rather slowly, along with
that the layer contains the non-ground material, which
is constantly poured into the device. Microwhirlwinds
originate at the “stream/non-ground material” border
due to significant difference of velocities, the relative
velocities of particles inside the microwhirlwinds
reach 100 to 300 meters per second. The particles
break to pieces blowing each other, friction polishing
the particles.
First, the researchers guided
by Yuri Birukov investigated the entire process with
the help of the mathematical model. The researchers
determined how many times each particle is to collide
with others to get broken into pieces and then to
get “ground” through to the required size and shape,
what should be the device parameters and the gas velocity
to get the nanopowder with predetermined characteristics
at the output. Besides, in order to exclude milling
of admixtures, the particles should not touch the
walls of the device in the course of circulation.
‘Besides mathematical modelling
there exists even more important physical modelling,
i.e. experimental investigation, says Yu. A. Birukov.
Experimental investigations of such complicated processes
as obtaining nanopowders last for years. We have produced
and tested hundreds of experimental plants within
30 years before achieving the above results.”
The results achieved are powders
of silicon, silicium nitride and silicon carbide,
of aluminium oxide, of tungsten carbide and of titanium,
aluminium, copper and tungsten, their average particle
size being 0.3 mcm (300 nanometers) and 0.5 mcm (500
nanometers). They contain practically no admixtures,
and the particles are very similar in size. They suit
perfectly for producing various refractory components,
for example turbine blades. The method is not too
expensive.
Research Educational Center
for Innovation Techniques, Tomsk State University,
Russia
Tel.: +7 (3822)529706,
email: powder@niipmm.tsu.ru
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