The invention relates to an emulsifying device for forming an emulsion with a continuous and at least one dispersed phase, especially an emulsifying device with a channel (or: gap) that is configured to accommodate laminar flowing liquid filaments of the different phases and that comprises a channel widening at which the at least one dispersed phase disintegrates into individual drops. Furthermore, the invention relates to a process for forming an emulsion with a continuous phase and at least one dispersed phase, especially a process for producing a mixed emulsion with several dispersed phases. The invention especially relates to an emulsifying device and to an emulsifying process with the features of the generic parts of the independent claims.
A conventional emulsifying device 100′ for forming an emulsion from a continuous phase and at least one dispersed phase that was described by C. Priest et al. in “Applied Physics Letters” (volume 88, 2006, 024106-01)is schematically illustrated in
The conventional emulsifying device 100′ in accordance with
A further general problem of the conventional liquid phase engineering consists in the controlling of chemical reactions between initial substances that are mixed in the liquid state. It is undesired in many applications that the reactions between the initial substances begins spontaneously already at the beginning of the mixing. Since the mixing process has a certain duration, the mixing ratio of the substances reacting with each other during the mixing and the further reaction is not constant. As a result, limitations can occur at the adjusting of a certain reaction stoichiometry or of other reaction conditions. This problem represents a significant disadvantage in particular in the production of high-grade chemical special products with a certain chemical composition. For example, during the production of semi-conductor nanoparticles from the liquid phase a relatively broad distribution of size of the nanoparticles also had to be previously accepted.
A solution of this problem could be reached with a mixture of the different liquids that are not based on the phenomenon of turbulence but rather on a common emulsifying. During the emulsifying a mixed emulsion with a certain mixing ratio can be instantaneously adjusted that is then constant for the entire duration of the reaction. As a consequence, the phase boundaries existing at first in the emulsion can be interrupted by an external influence such as, for example, a microwave field or an electrical voltage in order to obtain a defined starting time for the beginning of the reaction of the liquids.
The conventional emulsifying device 100′ has, in addition to the named problem of the low emulsion yield, the additional disadvantage that it is suitable only to a limited extent for the production of a mixed emulsion. Previously, in particular no possibility was published about how a mixed emulsion could be produced with the conventional emulsifying device 100′.
The invention is based on the objective of providing an improved emulsifying device available with which the disadvantages of the conventional emulsifying techniques are overcome. The invention is furthermore based on the objective of providing an improved emulsifying process which allows overcoming the disadvantages of the conventional emulsifying techniques. The emulsifying device and the emulsifying process should in particular have an expanded range of application and be especially suited for the production of mixed emulsions.
These objectives are solved by an emulsifying device and a process with the features of the independent claims. Advantageous embodiments and applications of the invention result from the dependent claims.
According to a first aspect, the invention is based on the general technical teaching of providing an emulsifying device for forming an emulsion with a continuous phase and at least one dispersed phase that comprises a dispersion region for forming the emulsion by a disintegration of laminar flows of the continuous and of the at least one dispersed phase, wherein a channel for receiving the laminar flows and a plurality of injection bores are provided through which the at least one dispersed phase can be injected into the channel, and the dispersion region is formed by a gap opening of the channel that opens directly into a free environment of the emulsifying device.
A compact emulsion source is advantageously created by the combination in accordance with the invention of a plurality of injection bores emptying into the channel with a dispersion region formed by a channel end, with which emulsion source an emulsion can be provided directly in a reaction vessel with practical, interesting rates and volumes. The injection bores make it possible that numerous liquid filaments are formed in the channel at the same time from a single or several, e.g., two different dispersed phases and flow to the dispersion region. In deviation from the conventional serial production of emulsions, a parallel production of emulsions is made possible.
According to a second aspect the invention is based on the general technical teaching of providing an emulsifying process wherein the continuous phase and the at least one dispersed phase exit in the form of a plurality of laminar liquid filaments flowing adjacent to each other from a channel at a gap opening into a free environment in order to form the emulsion.
The emulsifying device in accordance with the invention contains a feed line for feeding the continuous phase into the channel. At least adjacently to the channel, the feed line has a straight direction defining an axial reference direction (z-direction) of the emulsifying device. The exiting of the emulsion from the emulsifying device can also take place parallel to the axial reference direction (first embodiment of the invention) or in a direction deviating from the axial reference direction, in particular, in a plane vertical to the axial reference direction, i.e., in a radial reference direction (x-direction) (second embodiment of the invention). The emulsifying device in accordance with the invention furthermore contains at least one injection line for feeding the dispersed phase into the channel. The dispersed phase is distributed from each injection line via the injection bores in the channel.
The term “channel” or “gap” designates here in general a volume region between the injection bores and the dispersion region that is limited by walls with such a small vertical distance that liquids injected through the injection bores form laminar flows. The terms “continuous phase” and “dispersed phase” designate liquids in general here. The liquid of the dispersed phase (reactant, e.g., aqueous solution) is immiscible with the liquid of the continuous phase (carrier liquid, e.g., an oil). The concept “environment of the emulsifying device” designates a region bordering on the gap opening of the channel in which the emulsion can freely spread out in at least two spatial directions.
A broad variability in the geometric shaping of the dispersion region and of the orientation of the channel is advantageously given. According to a preferred embodiment of the invention the gap opening has a curved course of the opening so that the spatial density and in this case the yield of the emulsion formation can advantageously be enlarged. The dispersion region can extend in the reaction vessel for receiving the emulsion with an edge curved vertically to the axial extension of the emulsifying device whose length is greater than would be the case for a straight opening course. An endless gap opening with a closed opening course is especially preferred, e.g., with a circular opening course (ring gap). If the gap opening of the channel is designed to be circular, this can result in advantages for the adaptation of the outlet of the emulsion in axial or radial direction relative to the axial reference direction of the emulsifying device.
Two injection lines for feeding the at least one dispersed phase into the channel are preferably provided in the emulsifying device in accordance with the invention each having a plurality of injection bores. The injection bores open in opposite, e.g., upper and lower side walls into the channel. As a result, the feed of a dispersed phase with a high filament density in the channel and/or the separate feed of various dispersed phases into the channel are simplified. The openings of the injection bores into the channel are distributed transversely to the direction of flow in the channel in such a manner that a laminar liquid filament toward the opening of the channel can be formed by each injection bore. The at least one dispersed phase can be advantageously distributed with the injection bores via the channel in its transversal direction.
A variant of the invention is especially preferred in which the two injection lines are provided for feeding different dispersed phases into the channel. For this, the injection lines are connected to separate reservoirs of a fluidic device that contain the dispersed phases. The emulsifying device can advantageously be used in this case for the mixing of the dispersed phases.
According to a further advantageous variant of the invention the injection bores comprise funnel-shaped injection openings via which the injection line(s) is (are) connected to the injection bores. This advantageously reduces the flow resistance in the feed of the at least one dispersed phase. The funnel-shaped injection openings of adjacent injection bores can be connected by a groove, for example, a ring groove. This advantageously simplifies the introduction of the at least one dispersed phase into the injection bores.
If the channel runs parallel to the axial reference direction of the emulsifying device (first embodiment of the invention) the emulsion can be advantageously put out in a single direction into a reaction vessel. In the first embodiment of the invention the injection bores preferably run in radial direction, that is, vertically to the axial reference direction of the emulsifying device. If, according to a preferred variant, the at least one injection line and the feed line are arranged coaxially relative to one another, this can result in advantages for a compact design of the emulsifying device. In this case the emulsifying device can advantageously have an outer form of a cylinder in which the injection line and the feed line run axially and the dispersion region is formed on its free end (front side).
If the channel running to the dispersion region is aligned in radial direction, that is, vertically to the axial reference direction of the emulsifying device (second embodiment of the invention), this can result in advantages by a radial outputting of the emulsion in different directions relative to the emulsifying device. The channel preferably runs in radial direction from the feed line to an inner or outer circumferential edge of the emulsifying device. In this case the injection bores can advantageously be aligned parallel to the axial reference direction of the emulsifying device.
In the second embodiment of the invention the channel is formed especially preferably as plane gap between two plates extending in radial direction, that is, vertically to the axial reference direction of the emulsifying device. The injection bores can advantageously be arranged in one or both of the plates in order to correspondingly open on one side or both sides into the channel. The injection bores opening on both sides into the channel are preferably arranged staggered azimuthally relative to each other for the production of mixed emulsions. In this case different dispersed phases can be introduced alternately adjacent to each other into the channel.
Further details and advantages of the invention are described in the following with reference made to the attached drawings, which show in
Referring to the
The channel 20 (gap 20) is formed between the inner and outer parts 110, 120 and runs to the dispersion region 10. The channel 20 is set to receive a liquid layer with the shape of a hollow cylinder from the continuous and dispersed phases 2, 3 that form laminar liquid filaments during the feed of liquid that flow to the dispersion region 10. The distance between the outside diameter of the inner part 110 and the inside diameter of the outer part 120 (radial channel height) is selected in such a manner that boundary surfaces extend between the continuous and dispersed phases 2, 3 between the inner and outer parts 110, 120. The radial channel height is selected, for example, in the range of 1 μm to 0.1 mm.
The dispersion region 10 is formed by the opening of the channel 20 into the environment of the emulsifying device 100. The circular opening 11 is formed by the cylinder surface of the inner part 110 and the circular inner edge of the outer part 120, at which opening the channel 20 widens out by step in the radial direction. The laminar liquid filaments of the continuous and dispersed phases 2, 3 in the channel 20 become unstable at the gap opening 11 in accordance with the mechanism described by C. Priest et al., so that they disintegrate into individual drops. The drop size is substantially determined by the radial channel height that is equally large for all drops, so that a monodisperse distribution of drop sizes is advantageously produced. The drop size can furthermore be influenced by a filling pressure or a delivery amount of the dispersed phases in the injection lines. The filling pressure and/or the delivery amount of the dispersed phases can be adjusted in each injection line, e.g., with a delivery pump, in particular a syringe pump.
The feed of the continuous phase 2 into the channel 20 takes place through the feed line 30. The feed line 30 is formed like the channel 20 by the distance between the inner and outer parts 110, 120. This distance is preferably identical in the regions of the channel 20 and of the feed line 30 so that the channel 20 essentially constitutes a continuation of the feed line 30. Alternately, the radial channel height in the channel 20 can deviate from the channel height in the feed line, especially can be smaller.
Radially aligned injection bores 42 run to the channel 20 from an outer injection line 40 that surrounds the outer part 120 and whose walls are not shown in
In order to produce an emulsion 1 comprising the continuous phase 2 and the dispersed phase 3 the continuous phase 2 is conducted through the feed line 30 into the channel 20. At the same time the feed of the dispersed phase 3 takes place through the injection bores 42 also into the channel 20. In the channel 20 the flows of the continuous and dispersed phases 2, 3 flow as laminar liquid filaments to the dispersion region 10, at which the drop formation takes place. The flow of the liquid filaments in the gap-shaped channel 20 represents an essential feature for the production of monodisperse emulsions. Without the channel 20 the dispersed phase would fall apart during the exiting from small holes directly into the free environment even into individual drops that, however, would have a polydisperse size distribution.
The drops of the dispersed phase 3 flow in the variant according to
The
According to
For the formation of an emulsion 1 in accordance with the invention the continuous phase 2 is conducted through the feed line 30 into the channel 20. Furthermore, the dispersed phase 3 is conducted from an injection line 40 above the upper part 130 via the injection bores 42 into the channel 20. In channel 20 the continuous and dispersed phases 2, 3 form laminar liquid filaments that flow radially outward and disintegrate into individual drops at the ring-shaped gap opening 11 of the dispersion region 10 in accordance with the above-described mechanism.
If the injection bores 40 of the emulsifying device 100 in accordance with
According to
In order to produce a mixed emulsion 1 with the emulsifying device 100 according to
A drop size ratio can also be advantageously adjusted by the selection of a predetermined ratio of the volume flows. The drops with defined drop number densities form a specific arrangement in the structure of the emulsion as a function of the drop size ratio.
A further variant of the first embodiment of the emulsifying device 100 in accordance with the invention is illustrated in
The emulsifying device 100 according to
The emulsifying device 100 according to
The feed line 30 for feeding the continuous phase 2 is provided in the middle of the upper- and lower parts 130, 140. The injection bores 42 comprise funnel-shaped injection openings 43 connected via a ring groove 44. In distinction to
The construction according to
The upper and lower parts 130, 140 are arranged rotated relative to one another in such a manner that the injection bores 42 have different azimuth angles relative to the radial reference direction of the emulsifying device 100. Thus, the different dispersed phases can be advantageously arranged adjacent to each other in the channel 20.
In order to produce a mixed emulsion 1 the continuous phase 2 and the dispersed phases 3.1, 3.2 are introduced into the channel 20. A liquid filament is formed from each liquid entering through one of the injection bores 42 into the channel 20, the boundary surface of which filament relative to the liquid of the continuous phase 2 is fixed between the walls of the channel 20, that is, between the upper and lower parts 130, 140. A collar of liquid filaments that flow outward in a radial and laminar manner in the flow of the continuous phase 2 is produced in the gap-shaped channel 20 by loading all injection bores 42 with dispersed phases. The different dispersed phases 3.1, 3.2 are arranged adjacent to one another in an azimuthally alternating manner. If the liquid filaments flow outward through the circular gap opening 11 of the dispersion region 10, they disintegrate in the free environment into individual drops.
The second embodiment of the emulsifying device in accordance with the invention can be modified in accordance with the scheme shown in
In the variant of the emulsifying device 100 shown in
The features of the invention disclosed in the previous description, the drawings and the claims can be significant individually as well as in combination for the realization of the invention in its different embodiments.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2006 036 815.0 | Aug 2006 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP07/06899 | 8/3/2007 | WO | 00 | 3/3/2009 |