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Influence of Slurry Parameters on the Characteristics of Spray‐Dried Granules
Author(s) -
Walker William J.,
Reed James S.,
Verma Surendra K.
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
journal of the american ceramic society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.9
H-Index - 196
eISSN - 1551-2916
pISSN - 0002-7820
DOI - 10.1111/j.1151-2916.1999.tb01990.x
Subject(s) - granule (geology) , slurry , rheology , materials science , spray drying , particle size , chemical engineering , composite material , peg ratio , chemistry , mineralogy , chromatography , finance , engineering , economics
A systematic study has been performed to determine how the characteristics of granules prepared by spray drying aqueous alumina slurries are influenced by processing parameters: binder type (PEG Compound 20M or PEG‐8000), solids loading (30 or 40 vol%), ammonium polyacrylate deflocculant level (0.35‐1.00 wt%), and spray‐dryer type. Correlations between slurry rheology and granule characteristics have been made, and a model for granule formation is presented. The packing density of the primary particles within the granules is lower for slurries with higher yield stress and is dependent on the slurry solids loading. Granules prepared using 0.35 wt% deflocculant (0.14 mg/m 2 ), which correspond to high slurry yield stress, are of solid morphology, whereas higher deflocculant levels result in hollow granules that contain a single large open pore or crater. The degree to which particles are able to rearrange during drying influences the final granule density and is determined by the strength of the floc structure, as indicated by the slurry yield stress. When the yield stress is low, a crater may form from the inward collapse of the surface of a forming granule when the particle packing density in a droplet continues to increase after the droplet size becomes fixed by the formation of a rigid shell, leaving an internal void with internal pressure lower than that of the surrounding atmosphere.

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