Ceramic Raw Materials from the Pulsating Hot Gas Stream

Using a pulsating hot gas stream to optimize ceramic raw materials – Creating customized products on a technical scale

By using Glatt’s powder synthesis technology and the associated spray drying and calcination processes, new opportunities in raw material production have been explored. In this article, the inherent potential of barium strontium cobalt iron oxide (BSCF), doped and coated zirconium dioxide is described.

  • Authors: Dr-Ing. Viktor Drescher, Dr Rer. Nat. Johannes Buchheim, both Glatt Ingeniertechnik GmbH, Weimar
  • originally published in the magazine Interceram, issue 04/2022, Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden GmbH
  • keywords: zirconium dioxide, BSCF, raw material development, spray drying, calcination, powder synthesis
  1. Introduction

High-tech ceramics are currently used for various medical and technical applications; but, increasing competitive pressure is leading to growing demand for these special materials. As such, they are only commercially available from a limited number of manufacturers who have to produce batches of a specific size to operate economically. As a consequence, certain minimum purchase quantities are mandatory, at high prices, which often makes then difficult to obtain. This makes the development of innovative material and product ideas enormously difficult.

An alternative approach would be to produce lab-scale amounts of ceramic raw materials in-house or modify existing ones as appropriate. After successful testing, the manufacturing process must then be scaled-up to production volumes. Using two sample substances as examples, the advantages of such an approach are illustrated below.

Barium strontium cobalt iron oxide (BSCF) — Ba0,5Sr0,5Co0,8Fe0,2O3-δ — is a complex compound with a perovskite-like structure and is used as an ion conductor for oxygen membranes and as an electrocatalyst for hydrogen production [1,2]. Its use in fuel cells is also the subject of current research, but is often hampered by chemical instability. It has already been shown that by varying the iron/cobalt ratio, it is possible to adjust BSCF’s thermal resistance at low oxygen partial pressures [3] and increase its resistance to CO2 by decreasing the barium content [4]. As such, this demonstrates the potential to modify the property profile of complex materials to meet the needs of a particular application.

The second example that will be discussed in more detail is zirconium dioxide (ZrO2). It’s used for the large-scale production of thermal insulation layers, medical applications and commodity products such as kitchen knives. The material occurs in different crystalline structures; at room temperature and normal pressure, pure ZrO2 exists in a monoclinic phase. With increasing temperature, this changes to a tetragonal structure (1170 °C) and, from approx. 2370 °C, into a cubic crystal structure [5,6]. Owing to this phase transformation and the associated change in volume, it is not possible to manufacture components from pure zirconium dioxide.

The high-temperature phase can be stabilized by adding doping elements such as M2+, M3+ or M4+, or by charge compensation [7,8]. Even though numerous variations are already commercially available, the combination of different stabilizers offers further potential [9]. There is, however, another way to adapt its material properties: studies show that doping the powders before sintering is not necessarily the optimal solution. According to current research, excess doping elements diffuse to the grain boundaries during sintering. Owing to the low concentration differences, this process takes place very slowly [10]. It is better to apply doping elements as a layer on an undoped powder. During the subsequent sintering process, the high concentration gradient causes much faster diffusion — this time from the outside into the center of the grains. Therefore, coated powders allow lower sintering temperatures compared with homogeneously doped powders or the sintering time can be reduced. Because of the finer-grained microstructures, higher density components with better mechanical properties can be achieved [11].

  1. Experimental procedure

A powder synthesis reactor from Glatt Ingenieurtechnik was used to produce and coat the powders (Fig. 1). The synthesis process is based on spray drying during which a solution is sprayed into a hot gas stream and dried. Using spray suspensions produces coatings in which the precursors are present in solution. Here, the surface properties of the core material can be influenced by changing the pH value so that bonds form between the core and the homogeneous coating. In addition to cost savings, this represents another clear advantage compared with alternative technologies such as physical or chemical vapor deposition.

Unlike conventional spray drying, this system uses a pulsating hot gas flow that significantly affects how the gas flow and the sprayed material interact. When pressure is applied, the droplets are atomized, resulting in very fine powders in the nano- to single-digit micrometer range. In addition, the increasing/decreasing flow velocity creates massive turbulence — especially near the reactor wall. These compensate for any temperature and velocity gradients inside the reactor. At the same time, droplets or particles are also mixed transversely in the reactor, thus homogenizing their residence time.

The constantly changing flow velocity, in combination with the inertia of the particles, means that a relative velocity between the particles and the gas is maintained throughout the entire length of the reactor. The upshot is that no boundary layers can form that would hinder the heat and/or mass transfer. The pulsation is induced mechanically and, by choosing the geometry of the pulsator, sinusoidal as well as jagged waves can be generated. Here, too, the drying and functionalization of the particles can be influenced.

The technology also differs from other systems in terms of the heating source. By using an electric heater, there is a high degree of flexibility with regard to the process gases (inert, oxidizing or reducing). The electric heater also allows complete decoupling of the temperature, pulsation and carrier gas flow. Thus, the advantages of the pulsed gas flow can be utilized at a wide range of temperatures: from ambient to 1300 °C.

The BSCF powder was synthesized by dissolving aliquots of BaCO3, SrCO3, CoCO3 and Fe(NO3)3∙9H2O according to the chemical composition Ba0,5Sr0,5Co0,8Fe0,2O3-δ in a solution containing citric acid. Spraying was done with a temperature-compensating two-substance nozzle at a spray pressure of 2.5 bar. The powder was separated using H13 cassette filters.

Experiments to prepare of ZrO2 as well as Yttrium-stabilized ZrO2 (3YSZ) were done by dissolving the corresponding carbonates in diluted HNO3 (1 mol/L). Spraying was done with a temperature-compensating two-substance nozzle at a spray pressure of 2.5 bar. Samples were taken from the process gas stream using a cyclone. ZrO2 was coated with Yttrium oxide  by dissolving Y(NO3)3∙6H2O. Commercially available ZrO2 was then added. The prepared suspension was sprayed using a temperature-compensating two-substance nozzle at a spray pressure of 2.0 bar.

  1. Results and discussion

The production of the powders was controlled using the reactor’s outlet temperature. Controlling the heating stages of the jacket heater was fully automated (although each stage can be controlled separately if required). In perspective, this allows defined temperature profiles to be displayed within the reaction tube. The pulsating process gas was preheated via a primary heating element.

The production of the BSCF material took place at a reactor outlet temperature of approx. 1240 °C. The product was abruptly cooled by introducing cooling gas and separated by filters. The phase composition was determined by powder X-ray diffraction (PXRD) (Fig. 2). At this stage, the material had a cubic crystal structure in the space group Pm-3m with high crystallinity. Impurities were not detected. The determined lattice constant a = 0.3986 nm corresponds to values from the literature [2].

Initial results (Fig. 3) indicate a potential use for oxygen-separating membranes. The subject of further investigations is its use as a catalyst for hydrogen production by alkaline water electrolysis. Initial studies on this have been positive (Fig. 4).

The production of ZrO2 and yttrium-stabilized ZrO2 (3YSZ) took place at a reactor outlet temperature of approx. 930 °C. X-ray analyses of the undoped ZrO2 showed a high proportion of tetragonal crystal structure (approx. 90 wt%) as well as the monoclinic modification (10 wt%). The occurrence of the metastable tetragonal phase (Fig. 5) of 3YSZ is due to the nano- and polycrystalline properties (20 nm crystallite size) [12]. An irregular particle shape with a large specific surface area can be seen in Fig. 6 with scanning electron micrographs (SEMs).

The coating of commercially available ZrO2 took place at a reactor outlet temperature of 425 °C. The influence of the process conditions — especially the pulsation — can be seen in SEM images (Fig. 7). The spherical and donut-like agglomerates are partially broken up, but this does not hinder further processing of the material. The crystallographic properties of the powder remain unaffected at the selected process temperature (Fig. 8). Minor components, such as Y2O3, were not detected. The elemental composition and distribution could be determined by energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDX). Investigations on single particles reflect a successful coating of the ZrO2 with yttrium (Fig. 9).

  1. Summary

Using the two sample substances, BSCF and doped/coated zirconium dioxide, it was possible to show that it’s inherently possible to produce complex ceramic substances on a laboratory to pilot scale. The powder synthesis technology used for this purpose offers additional possibilities beyond drying in a pulsating hot gas stream by adjusting the frequency and amplitude to influence particle size, structure and morphology.

The flexible development of ceramic raw materials makes it possible to create and test application-specific optimized materials with little effort. After successful testing, the technology can be scaled-up accordingly and the batch sizes adapted to meet actual demand.

References

[1] Brett, D.J.L., Atkinson, A., Brandon, N.P., Skinner, S.J.: Intermediate temperature solid oxide fuel cells. Chem. Soc. Rev. 37 (2008) 1568–78.

[2] Li, X., He, L., Zhong, X., Zhang, J., Luo, S., Yi, W., Zhang, L., Hu, M., Tang, J., Zhou, X., Zhao, X. Xu, B.: Evaluation of A-Site Ba2+-Deficient BaCo0.4Fe0.4Zr0.1Y0.1O Oxides as Electrocatalysts for Efficient Hydrogen Evolution Reaction. Scanning 2018, Article ID 1341608.

[3] Ovenstone, J., Jung, J., White, J. S., Edwards, D. D., Misture, S. T.: Phase stability of BSCF in low oxygen partial pressures. Journal of Solid State Chemistry 181 (2008), [3] 576-586, ISSN 0022-4596.

[4] Yan, A., Yang, M., Hou, Z., Dong, Y., Cheng, M.: Investigation of Ba1−xSrxCo0.8Fe0.2O3−δ as cathodes for low-temperature solid oxide fuel cells both in the absence and presence of CO2. Journal of Power Sources 185 (2008), [1] 76-84.

[5] Goff, J. P., Hayes, W., Hull, S., Hutchings, M. T., Clausen, K. N.: Defect structure of yttria-stabilized zirconia and its influence on the ionic conductivity at elevated temperatures. Phys. Rev. B 59 (1999), 14202.

[6] Evans, A.G., Heuer, A. H.: REVIEW—Transformation Toughening in Ceramics: Martensitic Transformations in Crack-Tip Stress Fields. Journal of the American Ceramic Society, 63 (1980) 241-248.

[7] Garvie, R.C., Nicholson, P. S. (1972), Structure and Thermomechanical Properties of Partially Stabilized Zirconia in the CaO-ZrO2 System. Journal of the American Ceramic Society, 55 (1972) 152-157.

[8] Kelly, J. R., Denry, I.: Stabilized zirconia as a structural ceramic. An overview. Dent. Mater. 24 (2008), 289-298.

[9] Keller, E.K., Andreyeva, A.B: Effect of titanium dioxide on sintering and stabilization of ZrO2 in zirconium-alumina and spinel-zirconium mixtures. Refractories 2 (1961) 19–26.

[10] Kern, F.: Evidence of Phase Transitions and Their Role in the Transient Behavior of Mechanical Properties and Low Temperature Degradation of 3Y-TZP Made from Stabilizer-Coated Powder. Ceramics 2 (2019) 271–285.

[11] Burger, W., Richter, H. G., Piconi, C., Vatteroni, R., Cittadini, A., Boccalari, M.: New Y-TZP powders for medical grade zirconia. Journal of Materials Science: Materials in Medicine 8 (1997), 113–118.

[12] Vollath, D., Fischer, F.D., Hagelstein, M., Szabó, D. V.: Phases and phase transformations in nanocrystalline ZrO2. Journal of Nanoparticle Research 8 (2006) 1003–1016.

Acknowledgement

The BSCF trials took place as part of the “Novel Manufacturing Processes for Highly Permeable Oxygen Membranes and Development of an Innovative Membrane Connection Plate for Oxygen Generators- SaMBa” research project (FKZ: 2018 FE 9025).

The experiments on zirconium dioxide took place as part of the funded “PulsON – Development of an Efficient Production Technology for Highly Pure, Stoichiometrically and Morphologically Defined Nanopowders” project (FKZ: 2021 FE 9041).

The electrochemical characterization of the BSCF was conducted by Fraunhofer Institute for Ceramic Technologies and Systems IKTS in Hermsdorf/Germany.

The authors would like to express their sincere thanks to the state of Thuringia and the European Union for their support and help to conduct these experiments.

Further information on this topic and related topics can also be found in the following publications: