Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6582763
-
Patent Number
6,582,763
-
Date Filed
Monday, January 31, 200024 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, June 24, 200321 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 428 403
- 427 212
- 427 533
- 427 557
- 427 576
- 427 216
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
The oxide coated fine metal particles include fine core metal particles that are covered with a coating layer including an oxygen-containing compound of a dissimilar element that do not contain as a main component a metal element which is the main component of the fine core metal particles, or a complex oxide or a complex salt of the oxide, the complex oxide or the oxy-acid salt and an oxide of the metal element. A metal powder material is mixed with an oxide powder material of the oxygen-containing compound to obtain a powder material mixture. The powder material mixture is supplied into a thermal plasma to make a vapor-phase mixture and then the vapor-phase mixture is quenched to form the oxide coated fine metal particles comprising the fine core metal particles that are finer than the metal powder material and which are covered with the coating layer including the oxygen-containing compound.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to oxide coated fine metal particles which comprise fine core metal particles coated with an oxide, a complex oxide or an oxy-acid salt of a dissimilar metal or a complex oxide or a complex salt of oxides of the core metal and a dissimilar metal. The invention also relates to a process for producing such oxide coated fine metal particles.
Heretofore, coated metal particles comprising core particles made of inorganic materials such as diamond and ceramics or metals and which are coated with various metallic materials or inorganic materials such as ceramics, oxides, carbides and nitrides that serve as sintering aids or thermal spraying aids have been used in diverse fields including the manufacture of sinters such as electrical insulating materials (e.g., semiconductor substrates, printed wiring circuit boards and various other electrically insulated components), machining materials of high hardness and precision (e.g., cutting tools, dies and bearings), functional devices (e.g. grain boundary capacitors and humidity sensors) and precision sintered moldings, as well as the manufacture of thermal sprayed parts such as engine valves that require wear resistance at elevated temperatures. The use of such coated particles contributes to increase not only the strength of bond between dissimilar ceramics or metals in sinters and thermal sprayed parts but also their denseness.
Unexamined Published Japanese Patent Application (kokai) No. 253851/1996 discloses a composite powder for thermal spray having an average particle size of 10-150 μm. that comprises Ti particles having a Ni coating layer of 5 μm or more with the ratio between the size of Ti particles and the thickness of Ni layer being no more than 10. Unexamined Published Japanese Patent Application (kokai) No. 253853/1996 discloses a composite powder for thermal spray comprising Co—Cr based alloy particles with an average size of 20-99 μm that are coated with partly embedded WC particles having an average size of 0.5-20 μm. To produce these composite powders for thermal spray, the powders of the two starting materials are confined in a stirring vessel either directly or after being mixed uniformly with a mixer and thereafter agitated with a stirrer so that the coating particles are mechanically urged and compressed against the core particles, thereby achieving mechanical coating of the latter.
Commonly assigned Unexamined Japanese Patent Application (kokai) Nos. 75302/1991, 53268/1995-54008/1995, etc. disclose coated particles comprising the particles of an inorganic or metallic material with an average size of 0.1-100 μm that are coated with the superfine particles of a similar or dissimilar inorganic or metallic material having an average size of 0.005-0.5 μm, as well as processes for producing such coated particles. The processes disclosed in these patents comprise the steps of generating the superfine particles by a vapor-phase method such as a thermal plasma method, introducing the core particles into the stream of the generated superfine particles, and contacting the two kinds of particles in a fluid state so that the surfaces of the core particles are coated with the superfine particles.
The composite powders for thermal spray that are disclosed in Unexamined Published Japanese Patent Application Nos. 253851/1996 and 253853/1996, supra, are no more than those produced by mechanically urging and compressing coating particles such as Ni or WC particles against core particles such as Ti or Co—Cr based alloy particles until a mechanical coating is produced. The adhesion between the core and coating particles at their interface is weak and, as a further problem, the size of the core particles is as large as several micrometers to a hundred-odd micrometers and the coating particles are also limited to those which are no smaller than 0.5-20 micrometers. In addition, the core particles are metal and the disclosure about the coating particles is limited to metals and carbides thereof; in other words, the surfaces of core metal particles are not coated with an oxide of a dissimilar metal.
Speaking of the coated particles disclosed in commonly assigned Japanese Patent Application Nos. 75302/1991, 53268/1995-54008/1995, etc., supra, the coating particles are as fine as 0.005-0.5 μm in average size since they are generated by a vapor-phase method such as a thermal plasma method. However, if the core particles are very small, say, having an average size of 1 μm or less, agglomeration is likely to occur making it difficult to give monodisperse particles and, hence, effectively coated core particles. To deal with this problem, the core particles are kept as large as 0.1-100 μm in average size and coated with the superfine particles, with the result that one can produce only large coated particles. In addition, the coated particles do not have a completely surrounding film. It should also be noted that the disclosure is substantially limited to the case where the superfine coating particles are also made of metal if the core particles are made of metal; in other words, there is no teaching of coating fine metal particles with an oxide of a dissimilar metal to produce oxide coated, fine metal particles.
Unexamined Published Japanese Patent Application No. 54008/1995, supra, discloses alumina coated quasi-fine TiAl particles comprising TiAl quasi-fine core particles with an average size of 40 μm that are coated with superfine alumina (Al
2
O
3
) particles. However, the core particles are not smaller than 1 μm and the coating alumina is not an oxide of a dissimilar metal, but similar to the metal in the main component of the core particles.
As described above, the coated particles available to date comprise large core particles, use metal coatings if the core particles are made of metal, and apply inorganic coatings if the core particles are made of inorganic materials. These coated particles are useful in sinters and thermal sprayed parts of the types described above but are not suitable for use in artificial bones with which strength and biocompatibility are two major concerns, and electrode materials in fuel cells that require high strength and good adhesion to various inorganic materials. Therefore, it has been strongly desired to develop oxide coated fine metal particles comprising fine metal particles coated with an oxide of a dissimilar metal.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention has been accomplished under these circumstances and has as an object providing novel oxide coated fine metal particles comprising fine core metal particles that are coated ruggedly, preferably over the entire surfaces, with an oxide that does not contain as a main component the metal element which is the main component of the fine core metal particles.
Another object of the invention is to provide a process for producing the novel oxide coated fine metal particles in a positive and easy way.
The first object of the invention can be attained by oxide coated fine metal particles comprising fine core metal particles that are covered with a coating layer comprising either an oxide, a complex oxide or an oxy-acid salt that do not contain as a main component a metal element which is the main component of a fine core metal particles, or a complex oxide or a complex salt of the oxide, the complex oxide or the oxy-acid salt and an oxide of the metal element.
Preferably, the core particles have an average size of 0.01-1 μm and the coating layer has an average thickness of 1-10 nm.
In a preferred embodiment, the metal element which is the main component of the fine core metal particles is at least one member of the group consisting of Al, Ti, V, Cr, Fe, Co, Ni, Mn, Cu, Zn, Zr, Ru, Pd, Ag, In, Pt, Au and Sm, and wherein the oxide, the complex oxide or the oxy-acid salt with which the fine core metal particles are coated is at least one member of the group consisting of titanium oxide, zirconium oxide, calcium oxide, silicon oxide, aluminum oxide, silver oxide, iron oxide, magnesium oxide, manganese oxide, yttrium oxide, cerium oxide, samarium oxide, beryllium oxide, barium titanate, lead titanate, lithium aluminate, yttrium vanadate, calcium phosphate, calcium zirconate, lead titanate zirconate, iron titanium oxide, cobalt titanium oxide and barium stannate.
The second object of the invention can be attained by a process for producing oxide coated fine metal particles, comprising the steps of: mixing a metal powder material with an oxide powder material of an oxide, a complex oxide or an oxy-acid salt that do not contain as a main component a metal element which is the main component of the metal powder material to obtain a powder material mixture; supplying the powder material mixture into a thermal plasma to make a vapor-phase mixture; and then quenching the vapor-phase mixture to form oxide coated fine metal particles comprising fine core metal particles that are finer than the metal powder material and which are covered with a coating layer comprising either the oxide, the complex oxide or the oxy-acid salt, or a complex oxide or a complex salt of the oxide, the complex oxide or the oxy-acid salt and an oxide of the metal element.
Preferably, the core particles have an average size of 0.01-1 μm and the coating layer has an average thickness of 1-10 nm.
In a preferred embodiment, the metal element which is the main component of the fine core metal particles is at least one member of the group consisting of Al, Ti, V, Cr, Fe, Co, Ni, Mn, Cu, Zn, Zr, Ru, Pd, Ag, In, Pt, Au and Sm, and wherein the oxide, the complex oxide or the oxy-acid salt with which the fine core metal particles are coated is at least one member of the group consisting of titanium oxide, zirconium oxide, calcium oxide, silicon oxide, aluminum oxide, silver oxide, iron oxide, magnesium oxide, manganese oxide, yttrium oxide, cerium oxide, samarium oxide, beryllium oxide, barium titanate, lead titanate, lithium aluminate, yttrium vanadate, calcium phosphate, calcium zirconate, lead titanate zirconate, iron titanium oxide, cobalt titanium oxide and barium stannate.
Preferably, the metal powder material has an average particle size of 0.5-20 μm and more preferably, all the particles in the feed are 20 μm and smaller; the oxide powder material has preferably an average particle size of 0.1-1 μm.
In a preferred embodiment, the metal powder material and the oxide powder material are mixed with a high-speed shear and impact mixer or a milling mixer. In another preferred embodiment, the powder material mixture of the metal powder material and the oxide powder material is an aggregate of composite particles having the individual particles in the metal powder material coated with the oxide powder material.
Preferably, the thermal plasma has a higher temperature than boiling points of the metal powder material and the oxide powder material.
In a preferred embodiment, the thermal plasma is in an atmosphere at 760 mmHg or below. In another preferred embodiment, the thermal plasma is in an atmosphere at 200-600 Torr.
Preferably, the vapor-phase mixture is quenched in an inert or reducing atmosphere; it is also preferred that the vapor-phase mixture is quenched in an atmosphere containing a rare gas either independently or in admixture with hydrogen.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1
is a schematic cross section of an exemplary oxide coated fine metal particle according to the invention;
FIG. 2
is a block diagram for an example of the process of the invention for producing oxide coated fine metal particles;
FIG. 3
is a block diagram for an example of the mixing step in the process shown in
FIG. 2
;
FIGS. 4A-4C
illustrate how particles are composited in the mixing step shown in
FIG. 3
;
FIG. 5
is a diagrammatic vertical section of an embodiment of an apparatus for producing oxide coated fine metal particles by implementing the thermal plasma treatment in the process shown in
FIG. 2
;
FIG. 6
is a transmission electron micrograph of one of the oxide coated fine metal particles prepared in Example 1 of the invention;
FIG. 7
is a chart of EDX analysis at point No.
5
of the oxide coated fine metal particle shown in the transmission electron micrograph of
FIG. 6
;
FIG. 8
is a chart of EDX analysis at point No.
6
of the oxide coated fine metal particle shown in the transmission electron micrograph of
FIG. 6
;
FIG. 9
is a transmission electron micrograph of one of the oxide coated fine metal particles prepared in Example 2 of the invention;
FIG. 10
is a chart of EDX analysis at point B
1
of the oxide coated fine metal particle shown in
FIG. 9
; and
FIG. 11
is a chart of EDX analysis at point B
6
of the oxide coated fine metal particle shown in FIG.
9
.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
The oxide coated fine metal particles of the invention and the process for producing them are described below in detail with reference to the preferred embodiments shown in the accompanying drawings.
FIG. 1
is a schematic cross section of an exemplary oxide coated fine metal particle according to the invention. As shown, the oxide coated fine metal particle (hereunder referred to simply as “coated particle”) which is generally indicated by
10
comprises a fine core metal particle
12
and an oxide coating layer
14
comprising an oxygen-containing compound of a dissimilar element such as an oxide that does not contain as a main component the metal element which is the main component of the fine core metal particle
12
or a complex oxide of said oxide and an oxide of said metal element.
The fine core metal particle
12
which serves as the core of the coated particle
10
may comprise a single metal or an alloy of two or more metals and a suitable type can be selected in accordance with the intended use of the coated particle
10
. For example, the metal element which is the main component of the fine core metal particle
12
may be at least one element of the group consisting of Al, Ti, V, Cr, Fe, Co, Ni, Mn, Cu, Zn, Zr, Ru, Pd, Ag, In, Pt, Au and Sm. More specifically, these metals may be used either in their elementary form or as various intermetallic compounds or as alloys of two or more of them, as exemplified by Fi—Co—Ni, Ni—Fe, Ni—Cu, Ni—Mn, In—Ni, Al—Ti and Ti—Cu alloys; composites of these materials may also be used. In particular, Ti is preferred for use in artificial bones, Fe in additives to cosmetics and as catalysts, and Ni in electrode materials in fuel cells.
The average size of the fine core metal particles
12
is not particularly limiting as long as they are fine particles; they are preferably fine particles having an average size in the range of 0.01-1 μm, more preferably in the range of 0.1-0.5 μm.
The size distribution of the fine core metal particles
12
is not particularly limiting, either, except that it preferably has less scattering or a smaller half-width.
The oxide coating layer (hereunder referred to simply as “coating layer”)
14
covers the surface, preferably the entire surface, of the fine core metal particle
12
and it is a layer of an oxide that does not contain as a main component the metal element which is the main component of the fine core metal particle
12
(which oxide may be called “a dissimilar oxide”) or a complex oxide or an oxy-acid salt that both satisfy the stated condition, or it is a layer of a complex oxide or a complex salt of the element in said dissimilar oxide, complex oxide or oxy-acid salt, the metal element in the fine core metal particle
12
and oxygen.
The dissimilar oxide, complex oxide or oxy-acid salt or the complex oxide or complex salt thereof that are used in the oxide coating layer
14
(and which are hereunder collectively referred to simply as “oxide” or “oxides”) are not particularly limiting and they may be any oxide, complex oxide, oxy-acid salt or complex salt, with a suitable type being selectable in accordance with the fine core metal particle
12
to be covered with the oxide coating layer
14
and the coated particle
10
to be finally produced. Examples include oxides such as titanium oxide (TiO
2
), zirconium oxide (ZrO
2
), calcium oxide (CaO), silicon oxide (SiO
2
), aluminum oxide (alumina: Al
2
O
3
), silver oxide (Ag
2
O), iron oxide, magnesium oxide (MgO), manganese oxide (Mn
2
O
7
), yttrium oxide (Y
2
O
3
), cerium oxide, samarium oxide and beryllium oxide (BeO), as well as complex oxides and oxy-acid salts such as barium (meta)titanate (BaTiO
3
), lead titanate (PbtiO
3
), lithium aluminate, yttrium vanadate, calcium phosphate, calcium zirconate, lead titanate zirconate, iron titanium oxide (FeTiO
3
), cobalt titanium oxide (CoTiO
3
) and barium stannate (BaSnO
3
). In particular, CaO or SiO
2
or calcium phosphate is preferably used with Ti in artificial bones, TiO
2
with Fe in additives to cosmetics or as catalysts, and ZrO
2
or BaTiO
3
with Ni or Cu in electrode materials in fuel cells.
The average thickness of the coating layer
14
is not particularly limiting and may be selected as appropriate for the average size of the fine core metal particle
12
and the size and intended use of the coated particle
10
; preferably, it is within the range of 1-10 nm, more preferably 3-5 nm. One of the features of the invention is that the thickness of the coating layer
14
is uniform or nearly uniform over the entire surface of the fine core metal particle
12
and, needless to say, the more uniform the thickness is, the better. However, this is not the sole case of the invention and some variation in the thickness of the coating layer
14
is permissible if its average thickness over the entire surface of the fine core metal particle
12
is within the stated range of 1-10 nm.
Having described the basic construction of the oxide coated fine metal particles of the invention according to its first aspect, we now describe the process for producing such particles according to the second aspect of the invention with reference to
FIGS. 2-5
.
FIG. 2
is a block diagram for an example of the process of the invention for producing oxide coated fine metal particles.
FIG. 3
is a block diagram for an example of the mixing step in the process shown in FIG.
2
.
FIGS. 4A-4C
illustrate how particles are composited in the mixing step shown in FIG.
3
.
FIG. 5
is a diagrammatic vertical section of an exemplary apparatus for producing oxide coated fine metal particles by implementing the thermal plasma treatment in the process shown in FIG.
2
. It should, however, be noted that the process of the invention for producing oxide coated fine metal particles is by no means limited to the illustrated cases.
In
FIG. 2
, the basic flow of implementing the process of the invention for producing oxide coated fine metal particles is generally indicated by
20
and comprises a mixing step
26
in which a metal powder material
22
for forming the fine core metal particles
12
is mixed with an oxide powder material
24
for forming the oxide coating layer
14
and a thermal plasma treatment step
28
in which the mixture of the metal powder material
22
and the oxide powder material
24
as obtained in the mixing step
26
is treated with a thermal plasma to produce the coated particles
10
of the invention which comprise the fine metal particles
12
that have been refined from the metal powder material
22
and which are covered with the dense coating layer
14
.
The metal powder material
22
used in the invention is a raw material of metal powder for supplying the metal that is to constitute the fine metal particles
12
which serve as the cores of the coated particles
10
and it is not particularly limiting as long as it is made of a metal selected from among those which have been listed above in connection with the fine metal particles
12
. The average particle size of the metal powder material
22
is not particularly limiting; if the average size of the fine core metal particles
12
is within the range of 0.05-1 μm, the average particle size of the metal powder material
22
is preferably within the range of 0.5-20 μm and, more preferably, all particles in the metal powder material
22
are not larger than 20 μm.
The oxide powder material
24
used in the invention is a raw material of oxide powder for supplying the oxide, complex oxide or oxy-acid salt that are to constitute the oxide coating layer
14
of the coated particles
10
and which do not contain as a main component the metal element which is the main component of the metal powder material
22
; the oxide powder material
24
is not particularly limiting as long as it is made of a compound selected from among the aforementioned oxides, complex oxides and oxy-acid salts. The average particle size of the oxide powder material
24
is not particularly limiting; if the average thickness of the coating layer
14
is within the range of 1-10 nm, the average particle size of the oxide powder material
24
is preferably within the range of 0.1∝1 μm, more preferably within the range of 0.2-0.5 μm.
The mixing step
26
shown in
FIG. 2
is for mixing the metal powder material
22
(which is to form the core particles
12
) with the oxide powder material
24
(which is to form the coating layer
14
). In the mixing step
26
, any method that can mix the two powder materials
22
and
24
may be employed and it is preferred to mix them uniformly. The mixing machine to be used in the mixing step
26
is not particularly limiting and may be exemplified by known types such as a high-speed shear and impact mixer and a milling mixer.
In the mixing step
26
, it is particularly preferred to composite the two powder materials
22
and
24
so that the individual particles in the metal powder material
22
are dispersed and each discrete particle is coated on the entire surface with a multiple of particles in the oxide powder material
24
that have been dispersed and attached to form composite particles having a uniform coating on all core particles.
FIG. 3
is a block diagram for an example of the mixing step for producing such composite particles.
As shown, the mixing step
26
comprises a premixing sub-step
30
in which the metal powder material
22
and the oxide powder material
24
are mixed, preferably uniformly, prior to compositing, and a compositing sub-step
32
in which the resulting premix of the two powder materials is composited to produce composite particles
34
.
The premixing sub-step
30
is for preparing a uniform premix of the metal powder material
22
and the oxide powder material
24
. In the premixing sub-step
30
, a V-type mixer or a double-cone mixer is typically employed but any other known types of mixers may be substituted.
By using the above-mentioned mixers in the premixing sub-step
30
, the metal powder material
22
and the oxide powder material
24
are uniformly mixed as in the case of ordinary mixing (see FIG.
4
A), except that particles in the metal powder material
22
or, as is often the case, finer particles in the oxide powder material
24
more or less agglomerate together.
The uniform mixture of the metal powder material
22
and the oxide powder material
24
is then transferred to the compositing sub-step
32
where the particles in the two powders are composited to produce composite particles
34
.
The term “compositing” as used herein has one of the following three meanings: particles in the metal powder material
22
do not agglomerate together but they are individually coated on the entire surface with a multiple of particles in the oxide powder material
24
that have been dispersed and attached to produce composite particles indicated by
34
a
in
FIG. 4B
; a multiple of particles in the oxide powder material
24
are dispersed, preferably uniformly, and adhered to provide a coat, preferably a uniform coat, on the entire surface of an individual particle in the metal powder material
22
such that they are partly or totally buried in the surface of each particle in the metal powder material
22
, thereby producing composite particles indicated by
34
b
in
FIG. 4C
; and composite particles
34
which assume various states in between the composite particles
34
a
and
34
b.
In the compositing sub-step
32
, all particles in the two powder materials
22
and
24
are preferably composited so that all coated particles
10
are composite particles. Of course, this is not the sole case of the invention and the mixture of the two powder materials may partly remain to be composited.
The compositing sub-step
32
is not particularly limiting if it performs compositing of particles by a shear force, an impact force or a milling force; therefore, this can be implemented with any suitable machine such as a high-speed shear and impact mixer or a milling mixer.
The thus obtained powder material mixture (preferably containing the composite particles
34
) is then sent to the thermal plasma treatment step
28
, which is implemented by the apparatus for producing oxide coated fine metal particles that is shown in FIG.
5
.
The apparatus generally indicated by
40
in
FIG. 5
comprises a plasma torch
42
having a plasma compartment
42
a
, a sheathed quartz tube
44
, a sheathed cooling tube
46
, a quenching tube
48
, a powder material mixture supply unit
50
and a product recovery unit
52
.
The plasma torch
42
comprises a quartz tube
42
b
defining the plasma compartment
42
a
for internally generating a thermal plasma (plasma flame)
43
, a radio-frequency transmitting coil
42
c
mounted around the quartz tube
42
b,
a cooling jacket tube
42
d
mounted around the RF (radio frequency) transmitting coil
42
c,
a gas outlet
42
e
that is mounted on top of the quartz tube
42
b
and through which a plasma forming gas is ejected in three directions, tangential, axial and radial, and a supply port
42
f
through which the powder material mixture is supplied into the thermal plasma
43
formed within the plasma compartment
42
a.
The plasma torch
42
has a dual-wall structure consisting of the quartz tube
42
b
and the jacket tube
42
d
, with the coil
42
c
being inserted between them. This is not the sole case of the invention and the coil
42
c
may be wound around the jacket tube
42
d
or it may have a multiple-wall structure consisting of three or more tubes; the size of the coil
42
c
is not particularly limiting. The direction of ejecting the plasma forming gas through the gas outlet
42
e
is not limited to the three directions, tangential, axial and radial, but it may be so designed as to permit ejection in various other directions.
The gas outlet
42
e
is connected to one or more gas supply sources
42
g
that are located outside and above the plasma torch
42
.
When the plasma forming gas is supplied from the gas supply source
42
g
to the gas outlet
42
e
, it is ejected from the gas outlet
42
e
into the plasma compartment
42
a
in the three directions mentioned above. The ejected plasma forming gas is exited by a RF voltage supplied from a RF power source to the RF transmitting coil
42
c
, whereby a thermal plasma
43
is formed within the plasma compartment
42
a
in the plasma torch
42
.
The plasma forming gas to be supplied through the gas outlet
42
e
is limited to a rare gas such as argon or helium, a gas such as hydrogen or nitrogen, and mixtures of these gases. The volume in which these gases are supplied through the gas outlet
42
e
may be selected as appropriate for various factors including the size of the plasma compartment
42
a
, the properties of the thermal plasma
43
and the throughput of the powder material mixture.
The frequency of the RF voltage to be applied to the RF transmitting coil
42
c
and the voltage (or power) are not particularly limiting and may be selected as appropriate for various factors such as the properties, say, temperature, of the thermal plasma
43
.
In order to convert the mixture of the metal powder material
22
and the oxide powder material
24
into a vapor phase, the temperature of the thermal plasma
43
has to be higher than the eutectic boiling point of the mixture. The higher the temperature of the thermal plasma
43
, the easier for the mixture of the two powder materials to turn into a vapor phase and, hence, the better. However, the temperature of the thermal plasma
43
is not particularly limiting; it may be higher than the boiling points of the metal powder material
22
and the oxide powder material
24
or any other suitable temperature may be selected in accordance with the metal powder material
22
and the oxide powder material
24
. To give one specific example, the temperature of the thermal plasma
43
may be higher than 6,000° C. The upper limit of the temperature of the thermal plasma
43
is not particularly limiting, either; due to the difficulty in measurement, it is not easy to determine the upper limit but theoretically it would reach as high as about 10,000° C.
The atmosphere around the thermal plasma
43
is not particularly limiting and it is preferably at 760 mmHg or below, more specifically at 200-600 Torr.
The supply port
42
f
through which the powder material mixture is to be supplied is connected to the powder material mixture supply unit
50
which is also located outside and above the plasma torch
42
.
From the supply unit
50
, the powder material mixture, for example, an Fe—TiO
2
powder mixture, preferably, composite particles
34
are supplied and introduced into the thermal plasma through the supply port
42
f
as they are borne in a carrier gas. The carrier gas for bearing the powder material mixture is limited to a rare gas such as argon or helium, a gas such as hydrogen or nitrogen and mixtures of these gases. If desired, the plasma forming gas or part of it (one or more of the gases to be mixed) may be used as a carrier gas for bearing the powder material mixture.
The powder material mixture introduced into the thermal plasma
43
is momentarily turned into a gas by the heat of the thermal plasma
43
so that in this thermal plasma
43
, both the metal powder material
22
and the oxide powder material
24
in the mixture occur in a vapor phase. The volume of the powder material mixture to be supplied through the supply port
42
f and the kind and volume of the carrier gas which bears the powder material mixture are not particularly limiting, either, and may be selected as appropriate for various factors such as the properties of the thermal plasma
43
and the throughput of the powder material mixture.
The sheathed quartz tube
44
is positioned under the plasmas torch
42
and comprises a quartz tube
44
b
having a larger diameter than the quartz tube
42
b
in the plasma torch
42
and a cooling jacket tube
44
c
mounted around the quartz tube
44
b
. The quartz tube
44
b
defines in its interior a cooling compartment
44
a
into which the gaseous mixture (vapor phase) of the metal powder material
22
and the oxide powder material
24
produced by heating with the thermal plasma
43
and emerging from it is introduced for primary cooling.
The sheathed cooling tube
46
is positioned under the sheathed quartz tube
44
and comprises an inner tube
46
b
of generally the same diameter as the quartz tube
44
b
in the sheathed quartz tube
44
and a cooling jacket tube
46
c
mounted around the inner tube
46
b
. The inner tube
46
b
defines in its interior a cooling compartment
46
a
for effecting secondary cooling of the metal powder material
22
and the oxide powder material
24
in a vapor-, liquid- or solid-phase that have been subjected to primary cooling in the sheathed quartz tube
44
.
The quenching tube
48
is positioned under the sheathed cooling tube
46
and comprises an inner tube
48
b
much larger in diameter than the quartz tube
46
b
in the sheathed cooling tube
46
and a cooling jacket tube
48
c
mounted around the inner tube
48
b
. The inner tube
48
b
defines in its interior a coated particle generating compartment
48
a
where the metal powder material
22
and the oxide powder material
24
in a vapor-, liquid- or solid-phase that have been subjected to secondary cooling in the sheathed cooling tube
46
are quenched to generate coated particles
10
of the invention.
In the coated particle generating compartment
48
a
of the quenching tube
48
, the vapor- or liquid-phase mixture of the metal powder material
22
and the oxide powder material
24
that has been subjected to secondary cooling in the sheathed cooling tube
46
is quenched so that solid-phase coated particles
10
of the invention are produced all at once from the vapor- or liquid-phase mixture of the metal powder material
22
and the oxide powder material
24
. Each of the coated particles
10
comprises the fine core metal particle
12
that is more refined than the metal powder material
22
(i.e., having a smaller size than the particles in the metal powder material
22
, preferably from a few tenth to a few hundredth of the size of the latter) and which is covered with the dense and uniformly thick coating layer
14
of the oxide formed from the oxide powder material
24
. The coating layer
14
is made of an oxide, a complex oxide or an oxy-acid salt that do not contain as a main component the metal element which is the main component of the fine metal particles
12
, provided that it may also contain an oxide, a complex oxide or an oxy-acid salt of the metal element which is the main component of the fine metal particles
12
if it maintains tight joining (bonding) or coating on the fine metal particles
12
.
In order to retard or prevent the oxidation of the fine core metal particles, namely, the generation of an oxide of the metal element in them, the atmosphere in the coated particle generating compartment
48
b
of the quenching tube
48
for quenching the vapor- or liquid-phase material mixture is preferably inert or reducing. The inert or reducing atmosphere that can be used is not particularly limiting and may be exemplified by an atmosphere composed of at least one inert gas selected from among argon (Ar), helium (He) and nitrogen (N
2
) or an atmosphere containing both such inert gas and hydrogen (H
2
); specific examples include a rare gas atmosphere such as an argon or helium atmosphere, an inert atmosphere such as a nitrogen gas atmosphere or a mixture of argon or helium and nitrogen gas, and a reducing atmosphere such as a hydrogen-containing argon atmosphere, a hydrogen-containing helium atmosphere or a hydrogen-containing nitrogen gas atmosphere. The reducing power of these reducing atmospheres is not particularly limiting, either.
In the illustrated case, not only the plasma torch
42
but also the sheathed quartz tube
44
, the sheathed cooling tube
46
and the quenching tube
48
are designed to have a dual-wall structure; however, this is not the sole case of the invention and they may have a multiple-wall structure consisting of three or more tubes and their size is not particularly limiting either.
The product recovery unit
52
is used to recover the coated particles
10
of the invention that have been generated in the coated particle generating compartment
48
a
of the quenching tube
48
. This unit comprises: a recovery chamber
52
a
that is positioned outside and beside the lower part of the quenching tube
48
and which communicates with the coated particle generating compartment
48
a
; a filter
52
b
that is positioned between the recovery chamber
52
a
and the connection to the coated particle generating compartment
48
a
for separating the coated particles
10
of the invention from the fluidizing gases such as the carrier gas and the plasma forming gas; and a gas suction/exhaust port
52
c
through which only the fluidizing gases that have been aspirated together with the coated particles
10
of the invention from within the coated particle generating compartment
48
a
are discharged after separation with the filter
52
b.
The gas suction/exhaust port
52
c
is connected to a gas suction source
52
d
which is positioned outside and above the product recovery unit
52
.
The fluidizing gases that are aspirated through the port
52
c
by means of the gas suction source
52
d
comprise the plasma forming gas such as argon or nitrogen used to produce the thermal plasma
43
and the carrier gas such as argon for bearing the powder material mixture. These gases are aspirated from the coated particle generating compartment
48
a
to come into the product recovery unit
52
together with the coated particles
10
of the invention. Even if the particles produced in the coated particle generating compartment
48
a
contain not only the coated particles
10
of the invention but also incompletely coated particles as well as metal and oxide particles, these unwanted particles are completely recovered by the filter
52
b
to enter the recovery chamber
52
a
and only the fluidizing gases that have been filtered off are discharged through the suction port
52
c
.
The powder material mixture supply unit
50
is a device by which the mixture of the metal powder material
22
and the oxide powder material
24
that has been prepared by various mixing apparatus in the mixing step
26
is supplied into the thermal plasma
43
in the plasma torch
42
as it is borne by the carrier gas such as argon. Although not shown, the basic components of the supply unit
50
are a reservoir for holding the powder material mixture, a mixing compartment in which the powder material mixture from the reservoir is borne by the carrier gas, and a gas supply source for supplying the carrier gas into the mixing compartment.
In the illustrated apparatus
40
for producing oxide coated fine metal particles, the sheathed quartz tube
44
and the sheathed cooling tube
46
that perform intermediate cooling (primary and secondary) are positioned between the plasma torch
42
for converting the mixture of the metal powder material
22
and the oxide powder material
24
into a vapor phase and the quenching tube
48
that quenches the vapor-phase powder material mixture to produce the coated particles
10
of the invention. However, this is not the sole case of the invention and those intermediate cooling device may be omitted entirely, or a device of performing intermediate cooling in either one step or three or more steps may be substituted.
Having described the basic construction of the apparatus for implementing the thermal plasma treatment step
28
in the flow of producing the oxide coated fine metal particles of the invention, we now discuss the operation of the apparatus as well as the thermal plasma treatment step
28
in the production of the oxide coated fine metal particles.
First, the powder material mixture (preferably the composite particles
34
) prepared in the mixing step
26
is sent to the thermal plasma treatment step
28
, where it is supplied into the powder material mixture supply unit
50
in the apparatus
40
shown in FIG.
5
. Throughout the thermal plasma treatment step
28
, a predetermined RF voltage is applied to the RF transmitting coil
42
c
in the plasma torch
42
, the plasma forming gas supplied from the gas supply source
42
g
is ejected through the gas outlet
42
e
, and the thermal plasma (plasma flame)
43
is produced and maintained in the plasma compartment
42
a.
Subsequently, the powder material mixture is supplied from the unit
50
via the supply port
42
f
to be introduced into the thermal plasma
43
within the plasma compartment
42
a
, whereupon both the metal powder material
22
and the oxide powder material
24
in the mixture volatilize into a vapor phase.
The two materials, metal powder material
22
and oxide powder material
24
, that have been turned into a vapor phase by the thermal plasma
43
go down the plasma compartment
42
a
to leave the thermal plasma
43
and enter the cooling compartment
44
a
of the sheathed quartz tube
44
where both materials undergo primary cooling; the cooled materials further descend to enter the cooling compartment
46
a
of the sheathed cooling tube
46
where they are subjected to secondary cooling.
The two materials (metal powder material
22
and oxide powder material
24
) that have been converted to a vapor phase or partly to a liquid phase further descend to enter the coated particle generating compartment
48
a
of the quenching tube
48
. Since the coated particle generating compartment
48
a
is by far larger than the cooling compartment
46
a
of the sheathed cooling tube
46
, the two materials (metal powder material
22
and oxide powder material
24
) in a vapor phase or partly in a liquid phase that have entered the coated particle generating compartment
48
a
are quenched to solidify all at once to produce coated particles
10
of the invention. Each of the coated particles
10
comprises the fine core metal particle
12
that is more refined than the metal powder material
22
(i.e., having a smaller size than the particles in the metal powder material
22
, for example, a few hundredth of the size of the latter) and which is covered with the dense and uniformly thick coating layer
14
of the oxide formed from the oxide powder material
24
.
In this way, one can produce the oxide coated fine metal particles
10
of the invention comprising refined core metal particles
12
each of which is densely covered on the entire surface with the coating layer
14
that is made of an oxide, a complex oxide or an oxy-acid salt which do not contain as a main component the metal element which is the main component of the fine metal particles
12
, said coating layer
14
optionally containing an oxide, a complex oxide or an oxy-acid salt of the metal element which is the main component of the fine metal particles
12
.
In the thermal plasma treatment step
28
, the composite particles
34
prepared in the particle compositing sub-step
32
of the mixing step
26
may be substituted for the powder material mixture to be supplied from the supply unit
50
in the apparatus
40
for producing oxide coated fine metal particles and this contributes to achieve a marked increase in the yield of the coated particles
10
of the invention.
As already mentioned, the intermediate cooling performed in the process of the invention for producing oxide coated fine metal particles is not limited to the two-step cooling by the sheathed quartz tube
44
and the sheathed cooling tube
46
and it may be carried out in one step or in three or more steps.
Described above are the basic features of the process of the invention for producing oxide coated fine metal particles.
While the oxide coated fine metal particles of the invention and the process for producing them have been described above in detail, it should be noted that the invention is by no means limited to the foregoing cases and various improvements and modifications may of course be made without departing from the spirit of the invention.
As described above in detail, the first aspect of the invention has the advantage of producing novel oxide coated fine metal particles that comprise fine core metal particles covered ruggedly, preferably over their entire surfaces, with an oxide coating layer made of an oxide that does not contain as a main component the metal element which is the main component of the fine core metal particles (said coating layer may optionally contain an ordinary oxide, complex oxide or oxy-acid salt). The novel oxide coated fine metal particles are suitable for use in applications such as artificial bones, additives to cosmetics and catalysts that need fusion between metal functions (e.g. strength and magnetism) and oxide functions (e.g. environmental compatibility and photoactivity), and other applications such as electrode materials in fuel cells that need good adhesion between metal and oxide.
According to the second aspect of the invention, the novel oxide coated fine metal particles having the above-mentioned advantage can be produced in a positive and easy way, preferably in high yield.
EXAMPLES
The following examples are provided for the purpose of further illustrating the present invention but are in no way to be taken as limiting.
Example 1
An Fe powder material
22
having an average particle size of 5 μm and a TiO
2
powder material
24
having an average particle size of 1 μm were charged into the apparatus
40
shown in FIG.
5
and processed in accordance with the production line
20
shown in
FIGS. 2 and 3
to produce TiO
2
-coated fine Fe particles
10
.
In the premixing sub-step
30
of the mixing step
26
shown in
FIG. 3
, a high-speed agitating mixer Hi-X (Nisshin Engineering Co., Ltd.) was used; in the particle compositing sub-step
32
, a particle compositing apparatus Theta (Θ) Composer (Tokuju Kosakusho K.K.) was used.
Referring to the apparatus
40
shown in
FIG. 5
, the quartz tube
42
b
in the plasma torch
42
, the quartz tube
44
b
in the sheathed quartz tube
44
, the inner tube
46
b
of the sheathed cooling tube
46
and the inner tube
48
b
of the quenching tube
48
had the following values of inside diameter and length:
42
b
(55 mm×220 mm);
44
b
(120 mm×250 mm);
46
b
(120 mm×100 mm);
48
b
(400 mm×900 mm).
The TiO
2
powder material
24
and the Fe powder material
22
were supplied in such a ratio that the proportion of the TiO
2
powder material
24
was 4.5 wt % (8 vol %).
The RF transmitting coil
42
c
in the plasma torch
42
was supplied with a RF voltage of about 6 kV at a frequency of about 4 MHz; the plasma forming gas to be ejected through the gas outlet
42
e
was a mixture of argon (100 L/min) and hydrogen (10 L/min). Throughout the plasma treatment step, the thermal plasma
43
formed in the plasma compartment
42
a
of the plasma torch
42
was in an atmosphere at a reduced pressure of about 450 Torr.
The powder material mixture (Fe—TiO
2
composite particles
34
) were supplied into the thermal plasma
43
in the plasma torch
42
via the supply port
42
f
at a rate of 10 g/h as they were borne by a carrier gas (argon) flowing at a rate of 5 L/min.
The atmosphere in the coated particle generating compartment
48
a
of the quenching tube
48
was a reducing one composed of hydrogen-containing argon.
By the above-described procedure, oxide coated fine metal particles
10
could be produced in high yield. They comprised the fine core Fe particles
12
having an average size of 0.3 μm that were covered with the oxide coating layer
14
in an average thickness of 5 nm which joined tightly and strongly (ruggedly) to the surfaces of the fine Fe particles
12
.
One of the oxide coated fine metal particles
10
that were produced in Example 1 was examined with TEM (transmission electron microscope) and the micrograph taken is shown FIG.
6
. The same particle was subjected to EDX (energy-dispersive X-ray analysis) at point Nos.
5
and
6
and the resulting charts are shown in
FIG. 7
(point No.
5
) and
FIG. 8
(point No.
6
).
From
FIG. 6
, one can see that the single coated particle examined consisted of the core and the coating layer (or film) in a thickness of several nanometers. According to
FIG. 8
, the core was an Fe particle several tens of nanometers in diameter and it contained neither Ti nor O. Since Fe, Ti and O appear in
FIG. 7
, it may be concluded that the coating layer (or film) is made of an oxide of Fe and Ti in a thickness of several nanometers; namely, it is not a mere Fe oxide layer but is mainly composed of a complex oxide formed by coalescing between Fe in the core and TiO
2
in the coating oxide.
Given these data, one can see that the oxide coated fine metal particles
10
produced in Example 1 had the entire surfaces of the fine core Fe particles
12
covered with the dense and uniform coating layer
14
which was mainly composed of the Fe—Ti—O complex oxide and that said coating-layer
14
had a very uniform thickness.
It is also seen that in accordance with the invention, the oxide coated fine metal particles
10
one of which is shown in
FIG. 6
can be produced in an very positive and easy way with high yield.
Example 2
A Ni powder material
22
having an average particle size of 6 μm and a BaTiO
3
powder material
24
having an average particle size of 0.5 μm were charged into the same apparatus
40
as used in Example 1 and processed as in Example 1 in accordance with the same production line
20
as in Example 1 to produce BaTiO
3
-coated fine Ni particles
10
.
The BaTiO
3
powder material
24
and the Ni powder material
22
were supplied in such a ratio that the proportion of the BaTiO
3
powder material
24
was 5 wt % (7.3 vol %).
The other conditions of the production in Example 2 were completely identical to those employed in Example 1.
By the above-described procedure, oxide coated fine metal particles
10
could be produced in high yield. They comprised the fine core Ni particles
12
having an average size of 0.3 μm that were covered with the oxide coating layer
14
in an average thickness of 3 nm which joined tightly and strongly (ruggedly) to the surfaces of the fine Ni particles
12
.
One of the oxide coated fine metal particles
10
that were produced in Example 2 was examined with TEM (transmission electron microscope) and the micrograph taken is shown FIG.
9
. The same particle was subjected to EDX (energy-dispersive x-ray analysis) at points B
1
and B
6
and the resulting charts are shown in
FIGS. 10
(point B
1
) and
11
(point B
6
).
From
FIG. 9
, one can see that the single coated particle examined consisted of the core and the coating layer (or film) in a thickness of several nanometers. According to
FIG. 10
, the core was a Ni particle several hundred nanometers in diameter and it did not contain Ba, Ti or O. Since Ba, Ti and O appear in
FIG. 11
, it may be concluded that the coating layer (or film) is made of an oxide of Ba and Ti in a thickness of several nanometers; namely, it is a complex oxide (BaTiO
3
) layer solely composed of the coating oxide free from the Ni component of the core.
Given these data, one can see that the oxide coated fine metal particles
10
produced in Example 2 had the entire surfaces of the fine core Ni particles
12
covered with the dense and uniform coating layer
14
which was composed of the Ba—Ti—O complex oxide and that said coating layer
14
had a very uniform thickness.
It is also seen that in accordance with the invention, the oxide coated fine metal particles
10
one of which is shown in
FIG. 9
can be produced in an very positive and easy way with high yield.
Claims
- 1. A process for producing oxide coated fine metal particles, comprising the steps of:mixing a metal powder material with an oxide powder material of at least one member selected from the group consisting of an oxide, a complex oxide and an oxy-acid salt, wherein each of said oxide, said complex oxide and said oxy-acid salt does not contain as a main component a metal element which is a main component of the metal powder material, thereby to obtain a powder material mixture, wherein said mixing step comprises a compositing sub-step of compositing said metal powder material and said oxide powder material to produce as the powder material mixture composite particles in which particles in the metal powder material do not agglomerate together but are individually covered on respective entire surfaces with a multiple of particles in the oxide powder material that have been dispersed and attached and/or adhered; supplying the powder material mixture into a thermal plasma to make a vapor-phase mixture; and then quenching the vapor-phase mixture to form said oxide coated fine metal particles which comprise: core particles made of fine elemental metal particles that are finer than said metal powder material; and a coating layer with which said core particles are covered; wherein said coating layer comprises at least one member selected from the group consisting of: (1) said oxide; (2) said complex oxide; (3) said oxy-acid salt; (4) a complex compound of said oxide or said complex oxide or said oxy-acid salt, and an oxide of said metal element; and (5) a complex salt of said oxide or said complex oxide or said oxy-acid salt, and said oxide of said metal element.
- 2. The process according to claim 1, wherein said core particles have an average size of 0.01-1 μm and said coating layer has an average thickness of 1-10 nm.
- 3. The process according to claim 1, wherein the metal element which is the main component of said fine core metal particles is at least one member of the group consisting of Al, Ti, V, Cr, Fe, Co, Ni, Mn, Cu, Zn, Zr, Ru, Pd, Ag, In, Pt, Au and Sm, and wherein the oxide, the complex oxide or the oxy-acid salt with which said fine core metal particles are coated is at least one member of the group consisting of titanium oxide, zirconium oxide, calcium oxide, silicon oxide, aluminum oxide, silver oxide, iron oxide, magnesium oxide, manganese oxide, yttrium oxide, cerium oxide, samarium oxide, beryllium oxide, barium titanate, lead titanate, lithium aluminate, yttrium vanadate, calcium phosphate, calcium zirconate, lead titanate zirconate, iron titanium oxide, cobalt titanium oxide and barium stannate.
- 4. The process according to claim 1, wherein said metal powder material has an average particle size of 0.5-20 μm and said oxide powder material has an average particle size of 0.1-1 μm.
- 5. The process according to claim 1, wherein said compositing sub-step comprises compositing said metal powder material and said oxide powder material with a high-speed shear and impact mixer or a milling mixer.
- 6. The process according to claim 1, wherein said mixing step further comprises a premixing sub-step of mixing uniformly said metal powder material and said oxide powder material prior to said compositing sub-step to prepare a uniform premix of the metal powder material and the oxide powder material, and said compositing sub-step comprises compositing said uniform premix of said metal powder material and said oxide powder material to produce as the powder material mixture, an aggregate of composite particles having the individual particles in said metal powder material coated with the multiple particles in said oxide powder material.
- 7. The process according to claim 6, wherein said premixing sub-step comprises mixing uniformly said metal powder material and said oxide powder material with a V-type mixer or a double-cone mixer.
- 8. The process according to claim 1, wherein said thermal plasma has a higher temperature than boiling points of said metal powder material and said oxide powder material.
- 9. The process according to claim 1, wherein said thermal plasma is in an atmosphere at 760 mmHg or below.
- 10. The process according to claim 1, wherein said thermal plasma is in an atmosphere at 200-600 Torr.
- 11. The process according to claim 1, wherein said vapor-phase mixture is quenched in an inert or reducing atmosphere.
- 12. The process according to claim 1, wherein said vapor-phase mixture is quenched in an atmosphere containing a rare gas either independently or in admixture with hydrogen.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
11-021610 |
Jan 1999 |
JP |
|
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Oct 1996 |
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