The present invention relates to an apparatus for charging nanoparticles and particularly to an apparatus according to the preamble of claim 1. The present invention further relates to a method for charging nanoparticles and particularly to a method according to the preamble of claim 12.
Nanoparticles, i.e. particles having a size of 1 to 1000 nanometres, have been found to have a plurality of significant applications in industry, for example in glass industry for producing catalytic surfaces, self-cleaning and antibacterial products, glass dyeing and manufacturing of optical components, such as an optical fibre, etc. Feasible production of nanoparticles is a crucial factor in view of the feasible use of these applications. Relatively narrow size distribution (monodispersivity), anti-agglomeration and homogeneity are required of the nanoparticles. Nanoparticle production should be readily convertible from laboratory-scale production to industrial-scale production. In industrial scale nanoparticles are usually produced by vapour phase processes. The vapour phase processes, also known as aerosol reactor processes, include flame reactors, hot-wall reactors, plasma reactors, gas condensation methods, laser ablation and spray pyrolysis among other things.
The problem of the prior art is that nanoparticles used in industry are difficult to control when they are used in industrial application. Nanoparticles are for example deposited on substrates for providing a coating on a substrate or adjusting the surface properties of a substrate. Due to the small size of the nanoparticles they are difficult to deposit uniformly. Thus a non-uniform flux of nanoparticles is produced. The non-uniform flux is due to the fact it is difficult to control and guide the produced nanoparticles. Furthermore the prior art has the disadvantage that the material efficiency is rather low and the deposition is difficult to control and adjust as necessary. One solution to the mentioned problems is to electrically charge the nanoparticles and to use electrical forces to control or deposit the charged nanoparticles.
However, electrically charging nanoparticles is very difficult and it cannot be carried out in industrial scale using the known prior art techniques. The small size of the nanoparticles makes the electrically charging of the nanoparticles ineffective.
An object of the present invention is to provide an apparatus for electrically charging nanoparticles and a method for electrically charging nanoparticles so as to overcome the above mentioned problems. The objects of the invention are achieved by an apparatus for electrically charging nanoparticles according to the characterizing portion of claim 1. The objects of the present invention are further achieved with a method for electrically charging nanoparticles according to the characterizing portion of claim 12. The preferred embodiments of the invention are disclosed in the dependent claims.
The invention is based on the idea of electrically charging the nanoparticles in an indirect way. According to the present invention first one or more liquid starting materials are vaporized into droplets using one ore more atomizers. The produced droplets are further electrically charged during or after the atomization and the electrically charged droplets are conducted to an evaporation chamber in which nanoparticles are produced from the liquid droplets by vaporizing the liquid materials from the droplets. The nanoperticles may further be deposited on a substrate. According to the present invention the liquid droplets are electrically charged during or after the atomization before they are conducted to an evaporation chamber and before the liquid materials of the droplets are vaporized. When the liquid materials of the droplets vaporize the electrical charge of the droplets is transferred to the nanoparticles present in the droplets or formed during vaporization of the liquid materials of the droplets. Thus when the electrical charge of the droplets is transferred into the nanoparticles electrically charged nanoparticles are produced. The electrically charged nanoparticles may be guided or deposited on a substrate using one or more electric fields.
An advantage of the present invention is that electrically charging the droplets enables the produced nanoparticles also to be electrically charged as the electrical charge of the liquid droplets is transferred to the nanoparticles when the liquid materials of the nanoparticles is vaporized. Electrically charging the nanoparticles using the indirect way according to the present invention provides an efficient and industrially applicable solution for electrically charging nanoparticles. Furthermore, the electrical charge of the nanoparticles makes the flux of nanoparticles more uniform due to the repulsive electrical forces of the charged nanoparticles. In other words the charged nanoparticles repel each other due to the electrical charge such that the flux or distribution of the nanoparticles becomes more uniform. The electric charge of the nanoparticles also enables controlling or guiding the nanoparticles efficiently by using one or more electric fields. Thus the electrically charged nanoparticles may be controlled and guided using electric fields such that the charged nanoparticles may be efficiently deposited on a substrate.
In the following the invention will be described in greater detail by means of preferred embodiments with reference to the attached [accompanying] drawings, in which
The device 10 for producing nanoparticles 30 produces preferably nanoparticles 30 and water vapour. The nanoparticles 30 and the water vapour and are further condensed into a liquid starting material comprising the nanopartilces 30. Formed nanoparticles 30 may also be mixed into a liquid material in some other way for providing a liquid starting material having nanoparticles. However it should be noted that the liquid starting material comprising nanoparticles 30 may be provided in any other know method. This kind of liquid starting material comprising nanoparticles 30 may be any colloidal solution or dispersion comprising one or more liquid materials and solid nanoparticles 30.
The electrically charged droplets 3 are further conducted to an evaporation chamber 6 for generating electrically charged nanoparticles 30. The evaporation chamber 6 is arranged to vaporize the one or more liquid materials from the electrically charged droplets 3 for producing electrically charged nanoparticles 30 from the solid nanoparticles 30 in the droplets 3. During the vaporization of the liquid materials of the electrically charged droplets 3 the electrical charge of the droplets 3 is transferred into the nanoparticles 30 present in the droplets 3 and electrically charged nanoparticles 30 are formed. The nanoparticles 30 do not comprise any liquid material or the amount or mass of liquid material in the nanoparticles 30 is small compared to the mass of the solid material in the nanoparticles 30.
The evaporation chamber 6 may comprise one or more hot zones for enhancing the vaporization of the one or more liquid materials of the droplets 3. The hot zone may be provided by means of gas or with heating means, such as, heat radiator, electric resistor or some other means for providing the hot zone. The elevated temperature of the hot zone enhances and accelerates the evaporation of the liquid material from the droplets 3.
The liquid droplets 3 may form nanoparticles 30 at least in two alternative ways as shown in
An alternative way of producing electrically charged nanoparticles 30 is shown in
According to the above mentioned the electrically charged nanoparticles 30 are produced by atomizing one or more liquid starting materials 64 into droplets 3, electrically charging the droplets 3 during or after the atomization and vaporizing the one or more liquid materials of the droplets 3 for generating the nanoparticles 30 from the liquid droplets 3 such that the electrical charge of the droplets 3 is transferred into the nanoparticles 30 for producing electrically charged nanoparticles 30.
The electrically charged droplets 3 are further conducted to an evaporation chamber 6, which in this embodiment also serves as a deposition chamber, for generating electrically charged nanoparticles 30. The liquid droplets 3 may form nanoparticles 30 at least in two alternative ways as described above in connection with
From the atomization chamber 4 the charged droplets 3 are conducted to a deposition chamber 6. The deposition chamber 6 is provided with an electric field 61 for guiding the electrically charged droplets 3 towards the glass substrate 15 and/or depositing the electrically charged nanoparticles 30 on the substrate 15, as shown in
The glass substrate 15 having the nanoparticles 30 deposited on it is then conducted to a heat treatment 62 which may be carried out using gas blowers, burners, heat radiators, oven, laser or the like.
It will be obvious to a person skilled in the art that, as the technology advances, the inventive concept can be implemented in various ways. The invention and its embodiments are not limited to the examples described above but may vary within the scope of the claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FI2010/050556 | 6/29/2010 | WO | 00 | 12/3/2012 |