Title: TRIBOELECTRIC PHENOMENA IN PARTICULATE MATERIALS
1TRIBOELECTRIC PHENOMENA IN PARTICULATE
MATERIALS - Role of Particle Size, Surface
Properties, and Vapor -
Scott C. Brown1 Team Yakov Rabinovich1, Jennifer
Curtis2, Jan Marijnissen3 1Particle Engineering
Research Center, 2Department of Chemical
Engineering University of Florida 3University
TU-Delft, The Netherlands
Center for Particulate Surfactant Systems
(CPaSS) IAB Meeting Gainesville, FL August 20,
2009
2Industrial Relevance
Triboelectric charging is a persistent challenge
to powder processing industries.
-
-
SAFETY HAZARDS
SEGREGATION
AEROSOLIZATION
(e.g., dust explosions)
Mehrotra, PRL 99, 058001 (2007)
3Industrial Relevance (Contd.)
Tribocharging behavior subsequent interactions
for dielectric particulate materials are poorly
understood.
- Charge generation (e.g., tribocharging appears to
occur even between apparently identical
materials) - Image Forces (e.g., existing theories always
predict strong adhesion at close separation
distances, regardless of charge then how do
charged dielectric powders sometimes
self-levitate from particle beds? theories and
experiments are lacking) - Discharge Behavior (e.g., influence of contact
duration on charge transfer between dielectric
materials) - Vapor interactions (e.g., humidity inconsistently
mitigates electrostatic charge)
Inability to predict and fully control
triboelectric phenomena in powder processes
4Goals of the Project
- To acquire fundamental knowledge of the role of
particle properties and vapor content on contact
and triboelectrification phenomena
Influence of
- Particle Size
- Surface Properties (i.e., chemistry, roughness)
- Vapor (i.e., of differing chemistries)
on
- Charging
- Image Forces
- Discharge Behavior
- To identify simple techniques for mitigating
tribocharging.
5Research Methods/ Techniques
- Use Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) to understand
tribocharging phenomena at the single particle
and subparticle level.
Advantages of AFM Methods
- Precise control of frictional engagements
- Capacity to image charge distributions on
particles/surfaces. - Ability to quantify triboelectric charging, image
force interactions and discharge properties in a
single experiment. - Ability to precisely control local environment
(e.g., humidity, temperature, other vapor content)
- Conductive tips for charge mapping and
monitoring charge diffusion and dissipation.
- Colloidal probes for controlled tribocharging
experiments and interaction force measurements.
6Research Methods/ Techniques - Tribocharging
- Frictional engagement followed by normal force
measurement to determine - developed charge
- image force contribution
- contact mediated charge dissipation
Surface imaged post-rastering with an electrified
tip via electrostatic force microscopy (EFM) or
Kelvin Probe Microscopy (KPM)
- charge mapping
- charge diffusion
- charge dissipation
Applied bias to cantilever (static for EFM,
Sinusoidal for KPM) Monitored in non-contact mode
7Results - Tribocharging
System Silica Particle Polystyrene Surface
Rastered 1um at 50 nN load for 10 cycles
Prior to rastering
Charges developed by frictional engagement can be
dissipated by normal collisions.
30 min
1 min
(40 humidity)
Water vapor increases charge diffusion and
dissipation
8Research Methods/ Results Electro/capillarity
- Vapor mediated charge dissipation appears to be
more rapid when the formation of an liquid
annulus (capillary bridge) occurs. - charge mitigation occurs over seconds to a few
minutes
- Kinetics of capillary formation in
non-electrified systems not well investigated (2
instances of experimental data found Kohonen et
al. 1999 Xu et al. 1998) - Initiated fundamental research on the impact of
surface contact time with capillary force
development - Developed an equation relating annulus radius to
capillary force - Applied a Langmuir diffusion model validated for
large cm sized objects (Kohonen et al. 1999 Butt
et al. 2009)
9Capillary Formation Dynamics Deviations
T temperature ? humidity RMSfit RMS Surface
Roughness
? surface tension req Eq. Meniscus
radius k Boltzman constant T Contact angle
Theory
Experiment
66
56
45
System
- 5 - 7 micron silica colloidal probes
- Opposing silica surface
- Experimental characteristic time is by five
orders larger than predicted by theory for each
humidity - Similar deviation seen when analyzing the
independent data of Xu et al. and comparable data
obtained using silicon AFM tips.
10Summary
Preliminary experiments demonstrate
- Capacity to use colloidal probe AFM and EFM to
study and quantify triboelectification processes - Capillary formation leads to enhanced charge
dissipation in vapor environments. - Time scales of capillarity are order of magnitude
larger than previously believed.
Future Directions
Timeline
Effect of Particle Size
Effect of Surface Chemistry
Effect of Surface Roughness
Inert
Vapor based Mitigation
Year 2
Year 1
11Outcomes/ Deliverables
- Fundamental information on the influence of
particle size, surface chemistry, surface
roughness, and vapor phases on triboelectric
charging / discharging - Materials and methods for low level vapor induced
charge mitigation - Empirical (potentially fundamental) models
describing the triboelectrification behavior and
electrostatic interactions between dielectric
particles.
- Results are anticipated to be used for the
development of powder flow models to predict
segregation etc. in a future project.
Acknowledgements
Industrial members of the Center for Particulate
and Surfactant Systems for your support