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Powder Technology 162
Liquid spray vs. gaseous precursor injection — Its influence on the
performance of particle coating by CVD in the fluidized bed
Gregor S. Czok, Joachim Werther *
Hamburg University of Technology, Particle Technology, D-21073 Hamburg, Germany
Received 20 April 2005; received in revised form 13 September 2005
Available online 31 January 2006
Abstract
Aluminum coatings were created onto glass beads by chemical vapor deposition in a fluidized bed reactor at different temperatures. Two
different routes were examined. First, tri-isobutyl-aluminum (TIBA) vapor was enriched in nitrogen and thermally decomposed inside the
fluidized bed to deposit elemental aluminum. On the other hand, liquid injection of TIBA via a two-fluid nozzle directly into the fluidized bed was
tested. To ensure homogeneous coating on the bed material, the fluidizing conditions necessary to avoid agglomeration were investigated for a
broad range of temperatures. Also, different glass types and pretreatments of the substrate surface were investigated to elucidate the influence of
the surface chemistry on the growth and morphology of the layers deposited.
D 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords: CVD; Precursor; TIBA; Liquid spray injection; Fluidized bed
1. Introduction
For various applications in modern powder technology
coatings help to produce desired solids properties. Most
pigments for metallic color paints consist of a core particle
surrounded by a well-defined layer of a certain refraction
index to give the impression of a certain color, depth and
shine [1]. While wet processing of pigments requires solid–
liquid separation, drying, destruction of agglomerates and
often subsequent tempering of the fine solids, the combina-
tion of chemical vapor deposition (CVD) and fluidized bed
technology facilitates coating without additional process
steps.
The fluidized bed provides incentives for powder coating
due to intense solids mixing, excellent heat and mass transfer
and homogeneous temperatures. Although there are already
industrial applications of chemical vapor deposition in the
fluidized bed reactor (CVD-FBR) for pigment coating [2],
investigations in the open literature are scarce and the
governing mechanisms in the fluidized bed are not yet fully
understood. The technology is further mentioned for the
0032-5910/$ - see front matter D 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
doi:10.1016/j.powtec.2005.12.011
* Corresponding author.
E-mail address: Werther@tuhh.de (J. Werther).
production of noble metal catalysts [3,4], where metal organic
precursors are either decomposed thermally or by micro wave
or radio frequency plasma. In the patent literature CVD-FBR
can be found for the production of layered luminescent
pigments [5,6]. Here, one or more very thin but closed
protective coating layers of alumina or SiO2 are applied to
prevent moisture contact and the hereby caused decay of
brightness.
A first pioneering work was carried out by Liu et al. [7],
who investigated the thermal decomposition of tri-isobutyl-
aluminum (TIBA) for the coating of glass beads with high
refractive index. The application – although not named
explicitly – seems to be the production of color pigments
with angle-dependant change in color. Although the tempera-
ture range investigated was almost the same than in the present
work, the focus was on the surface chemistry of the reaction
pathways, the carbon incorporation into the surface layer and
the layer quality for different temperatures and operation times
from a chemist’s point of view. The fluidizing conditions, the
agglomeration tendency and the homogeneity of the coated
material were not further discussed. In the present paper the
fluidizing conditions and solids mixing rates were systemati-
cally studied. Special focus was set on the mode of precursor
injection. Two routes have been investigated; one being the
injection of vaporized precursor in a carrier gas stream, the
(2006) 100 – 110
www.el
Fig. 1. Injection mechanisms of A) gaseous and B) liquid precursor injection.
Fig. 2. Scheme of liquid precursor forming an agglomerate with particles.
G.S. Czok, J. Werther / Powder Technology 162 (2006) 100–110 101
other being liquid spray injection of TIBA directly into the
fluidized bed.
2. Theory
The transfer of the coating process from classical semicon-
ductor production at clean vacuum conditions to the coating of
powders with a high volume specific surface in the fluidized
bed requires a higher throughput of precursor, since, for
example, 1 g of 60 Am glass beads has a total surface area of
already 3.8 I10�2 m2. Therefore, a high feed rate of precursor is
required to shorten operation times and thus to keep attrition
effects as low as possible. Following classical CVD processes,
the precursor can be introduced into the reaction zone by a
carrier gas. The precursor feed rate is limited by the saturation
capacity of the carrier gas in this case. The enriched carrier gas
is usually kept well below the reaction or decomposition
temperature of the precursor to prevent gas phase reactions.
Inside the fluidized bed, the precursor gets in contact with hot
particles that are entrained into the cooler gas jet (Fig. 1A). The
decomposition reaction will preferably take place at the hot
particle surfaces, as long as the reaction is fast compared to the
mass transport. Thus, gas phase nucleation can be suppressed
largely.
To increase the precursor dosage, liquid spray injection can
be considered. The mechanisms here are displayed in Fig. 1B
for the application with a two-fluid nozzle. Those hot bed
particles, which are entrained in the jet, impinge onto liquid
precursor droplets or ligaments. Although the vaporization of
the liquid precursor is very fast (Leclere et al. [8] found a
vaporization time of 16 ms for a 300 Am FCC feedstock
droplet), according to Bruhns and Werther [9] some neighbor-
ing particles will be sticking to the droplet to form an
agglomerate (Fig. 2). Heat supply by the hot particles of the
agglomerate will cause the precursor to vaporize and since this
occurs locally very close to the particle surface, the gaseous
precursor decomposes on the neighboring particle surface.
Since each agglomerate acts as local source of gaseous
precursor with locally high vapor concentration near the liquid
surface, it can be expected that this mode of precursor supply
will cause a layer structure which differs from the morphology
caused by gaseous precursor injection into the fluidized bed.
Bruhns and Werther [9] have shown, that the agglomerates
formed in the spray jet easily fell apart after evaporization of
the liquid. In the present application it could be necessary to
agitate the bed to such an extent, that the formation of
permanent agglomerates is suppressed. This question is also
subject of the present experimental investigation.
3. Experimental
3.1. Experimental setup
The fluidized bed reactor for the injection of gaseous precursor had a cross-section area of 8�8 mm2, a height of 200 mm and
an enlarged freeboard section of 45 mm inner diameter for gas solids separation (Fig. 3). The fluidized bed reactor was built with
these small dimensions in order to be operated with a solids inventory of 4 g only. This made it possible to simulate the deposition
process in the fluidized bed reactor based on a discrete particle simulation, which is subject of another publication [10].
High-purity nitrogen (>99.99990%) was used as a carrier gas to be saturated with TIBA vapor. The gas flow rate was adjusted
by a mass flow controller (FIC) that was connected to a pressure controller to prevent over pressure (>150 kPa) at the precursor
flask. The precursor bottle was placed into a heated oil bath and used as a bubbler by inserting an immersible pipe. The oil bath was
kept at 82 -C to gain a TIBA temperature of (80T0.5)-C, measured by a Pt100 temperature probe (TI-1). The saturated nitrogen
was transported in pipes, which were heated to a temperature of 85 -C, to the fluidized bed reactor and entered the reactor through afour-hole nozzle. The diameter of the four holes was 0.8 mm each. The geometry of this four-hole nozzle is given in detail in Fig. 4.
Fig. 3. CVD fluidized bed reactor setup for injection of gaseous precursor.
G.S. Czok, J. Werther / Powder Technology 162 (2006) 100–110102
Several attempts to use a porous plate of diverse materials as a gas distributor failed, because the pores of the distributor were
blocked immediately by deposits.
For the injection of liquid TIBA precursor two different setups were used. In a first set of experiments for bottom spray mode a
reactor with 25 mm inner diameter and a height of 450 mm was equipped with an externally mixing two-fluid nozzle at the bottom
(Fig. 5). The nozzle used was a commercially available one manufactured by Spraying Systems Germany, model number VSS110-
D01. It was mounted in upward oriented position so that the gas flow was used for both, bed fluidization and transporting the liquid
precursor away from the nozzle. The nozzle had an open jet angle of 25- with water in air (Fig. 6). Three different inserts with
orifices of 100, 200 and 300 Am diameter, respectively, were used to modify the precursor flow rate.
In the second part of the investigation an additional setup with side spray mode was used, where the nozzle was mounted in
horizontal orientation on the side wall at a height of 25 mm above the porous plate gas distributor. This latter reactor had an inner
diameter of 54 mm and a height of 450 mm. The fluidizing gas was heated to the desired fluid bed temperature by an electrical gas
pre-heater in case of side spray to minimize temperature gradients within the bed.
For both spray setups the liquid precursor was transported hydraulically from the storage bottle to the nozzle by the pressure of
an adjustable liquid head in a bubble column filled with petroleum ether (max. 20 kPa (gauge)). The temperature of the fluidized
bed was measured at a height of 15 mm (TI-1), 100 mm (TI-2) and 150 mm (TI-3), respectively, above the bottom. The reactor
walls of both reactors were electrically heated to the desired bed temperatures controlled by PID controllers.
3.2. Bed materials
Three different types of glass beads were investigated as substrates for the coating:
& Type A: SwarcoForce (Swarco GmbH, Amstetten, Austria), surface mean diameter dp=64 Am, sodium glass used for
blasting
Fig. 4. Details of four-hole nozzle gas distributor.
Fig. 5. CVD fluidized bed reactor setup for the injection of liquid precursor.
G.S. Czok, J. Werther / Powder Technology 162 (2006) 100–110 103
& Type B: Spheriglas (Potters Europe, Kirchheimbolanden, Germany), dp=46 Am, high reflex glass containing Ba and Ti, used for
traffic signs and as a filler for cosmetics
& Type C: Plus9beads (Swarco GmbH, Amstetten, Austria), dp=66 Am, high reflex glass used for street marks.
The particle size distributions of these materials are given in Fig. 7 and the minimum fluidization velocities calculated by the
Ergun equation [11] are given in Fig. 8. All glass beads were washed in sodium hydroxide or hydrochloric acid liquor for 30 min
and rinsed with de-ionized water until pH=7 to ensure cleanliness of the substrate surfaces.
3.3. Precursor
As a simple example, the thermal decomposition of tri-isobutyl-aluminum (TIBA) was investigated to produce aluminum
coatings on glass beads. TIBA is a clear, pyrophoric liquid, which decomposes at temperatures above 200 -C:
Above approximately 50 -C TIBA loses one isobutyl ligand to form diisobutyl-aluminumhydride (DIBAH), which is a
hydrogen bridged trimer with a substantially lower vapor pressure of only 1.33 Pa at 40 -C compared to the vapor pressure of TIBA
of 13.3 Pa at 20 -C [12].
TIBA VT>50-C
p>3barDiisobutyl� aluminumhydride DIBAHð Þ þ isobutene
The saturation of the carrier gas with precursor inside the bubbler requires a moderate heating to increase vaporization of TIBA
and heating of all subsequent carrier gas feed lines to prevent condensation of liquid at cold spots. The dissociation reaction in turn
limits the temperature of bubbler and feed lines to avoid the formation of a larger amount of DIBAH, which would condense
immediately. Furthermore, it is thus very difficult to measure TIBA concentrations in the gas phase. The vapor pressure and the
dissociation rate found in Ref. [13] are given in Fig. 9.
3.4. Experimental procedure
In both cases – liquid spray and gaseous precursor injection – the glass beads were filled into the reactor from the top under
constant gas flow through the nozzle gas distributor or the two fluid nozzle, respectively, to prevent blocking of the nozzles by glass
Fig. 6. Open jet angle of the two-fluid nozzle with water in air.
0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 1600.0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
Type A (Swarcoforce) Type B (Spheriglas) Type C (Plus9beads)
cum
. mas
s fr
actio
n, -
particle size dp, µm
Fig. 7. Particle size distributions of the glass beads used in the present experiments.
G.S. Czok, J. Werther / Powder Technology 162 (2006) 100–110104
beads. After closing the reactor, the gas flow rates were adjusted to the operating conditions and the reactor walls were heated to
adjust the desired fluid bed temperature. In case of the gaseous precursor injection the storage bottle was placed into an oil bath
with 82 -C to heat the precursor to 80 -C. The storage bottle was closed and the immersible pipe was not inserted so that the gas
bypassed the bubbler during this phase.
In case of the liquid spray, the immersible pipe was also not inserted, so that a constant nitrogen flow purged the liquid
channel of the two-fluid nozzle preventing glass beads from clogging it. After the fluidized bed had reached the operation
temperature, the storage bottle valve was opened and the immersible pipe was introduced into the precursor liquid. In case of the
gaseous precursor injection, the nitrogen was enriched with TIBA while bubbling through the precursor liquid. The enriched gas
was transported through heated pipes into the reactor. In case of the liquid spray, the pressure of the liquid head of the bubble
column hydraulically transported the liquid precursor towards the two-fluid nozzle, where it was atomized by a nitrogen stream
(see Fig. 5). The gas stream for the spray nozzle was kept constant at a flow rate of 7 l/min (STP) throughout the experiments,
while the gas stream through the porous plate gas distributor was modified to study different intensities of fluidization and thus
solids mixing. During the experiments the temperatures inside the fluidized bed were recorded every 2 s to document the state of
operation. A typical temperature plot for an experiment with liquid spray injection is given in Fig. 10. The sharp decay of the
bed temperature at 14 min is the result of colder bed material which has settled down on the conical walls of the freeboard
sliding back into the bed upon knocking at the reactor wall. To stop the precursor injection after a desired period of time the
immersible pipe was pulled out and the storage bottle valve was closed. The heating was switched off and all nitrogen flows
were kept constant until the fluid bed was cooled down below 60 -C. Then the reactor was opened and the bed material could
be examined visually for flowability and the color on a greyscale.
The layer morphologies produced by both routes on the different glass types, with base or acid pre-treatment and at
temperatures between 225 and 500 -C were investigated by Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) analysis. Therefore, the
particles displayed in this article were chosen to be as representative as possible for the sample material of the according
experiment. The deposited mass of aluminum was determined by dissolution in 30% H2O2/HCl at 50 -C and analyzed by optical
200 250 300 350 400 450 500
1.5
2.0
2.5
3.0
3.5
4.0
4.5
5.0
Type C (Plus9beads)
Type B (Spheriglas)
Type A (SwarcoForce)
u mf, 1
0-3m
/s
temperature, °C
Fig. 8. Minimum fluidization velocities at a pressure of 1 bar in nitrogen, calculated with Ergun’s equation [11].
60 80 100 120 1400
2
4
6
8
10
12
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
vapo
r pr
essu
re, k
Pa
temperature, °C
diss
ocia
tion
rate
, %/m
in
Fig. 9. Vapor pressure and dissociation rate of tri-isobutyl-aluminum (TIBA)
[13].
0 5 10 15 20 25 30300
350
400
450
500
10 minutesliquid spray
injection
knocking onreactor wall
TI-1 TI-2
tem
pera
ture
, °C
time, minutes
Fig. 10. Typical temperature plot of a liquid spray injection experiment
(experimental setup of Fig. 5, TI-1 and TI-2 are two thermo-couples located
in the fluidized bed).
G.S. Czok, J. Werther / Powder Technology 162 (2006) 100–110 105
emission spectroscopy within an inductively coupled plasma (OES/ICP) in the Central Chemical Laboratory of the Technical
University Hamburg–Harburg.
4. Results and discussion
4.1. Injection of the gaseous precursor
Whereas in classical CVD processes like for very large
scale integration (VLSI) applications the furnace temperatures
are usually 200–300 -C [12] under reduced pressure, we have
investigated the injection of gaseous precursor in the
temperature range of 225–500 -C at ambient pressure for
different fluidizing conditions and pre-treatments. The oper-
ation time for each experiment was 30 min.
4.1.1. Influence of glass type and pre-treatment
The different chemical composition of the three glass types
used was expected to exhibit different layer morphologies of
the aluminum coating. All glass beads shown in Fig. 11 were
washed in 10-N sodium hydroxide liquor for 30 min and then
rinsed with de-ionized water until pH=7 to ensure equal
conditions. It can be seen, that the glass types A and C show
very voluminous deposits in comparison to the type B glass in
the temperature range of 235–250 -C. The Spheriglas (B)
exhibits only small islands of aluminum (white spots in Fig.
11B). The vast majority of the particles do not receive enough
aluminum to cover the surface.
To elucidate the influence of the base pre-treatment, a
further sample of type A glass was washed in 10-N
hydrochloric acid before the coating. The coated particles
are shown in Fig. 12B. No significant difference can be made
out between the two samples, indicating that the pretreatment
with acid or base had much less influence than the chemical
composition of the glass surface itself. These differences in the
morphology and affinity of the deposited aluminum are less
dominant at higher reaction temperatures, as can be seen in
Figs. 13 and 14. This can be explained by the increased
reaction rate at elevated temperatures. Aluminum atoms in the
glass matrix as well as edges and the surface roughness act as
nucleation spots. Due to the autocatalytic character of the
decomposition reaction, aluminum deposits preferably on
spots with such low nucleation energy [12] or onto already
deposited aluminum, leading to voluminous ‘‘cauliflower’’
structures (Fig. 12A and B). Also, there was no visible
.
Fig. 11. Deposits formed at 235–250 -C on the different glass types, A) SwarcoForce, u =8.2 cm/s; B) Spheriglas, u =8.1 cm/s; C) Plus9beads, u =8.3 cm/s; all
NaOH-washed, the white bar indicates the length of 10 Am.
G.S. Czok, J. Werther / Powder Technology 162 (2006) 100–110106
difference for the acid treated samples of the other two glass
materials.
4.1.2. Influence of reaction temperature
For lower temperatures in the range of 225–250 -C, nocomplete aluminum coating could be achieved. Instead, the
deposited aluminum formed lumps of agglomerates, partially
on the glass surface, but more often in between (Figs. 11 and
12). This can be explained by the autocatalytic character of the
TIBA decomposition reaction. The tendency towards agglom-
eration often led to clogging of the reactor and the superficial
gas velocity needed to be at least 4 cm/s to ensure
homogeneous deposition throughout the bed material for this
inlet concentration of the TIBA precursor in this special
geometry. With gas velocities lower than 3.5 cm/s, there is still
deposition of aluminum at the gas inlet and in the upper part of
the reactor, but in the lower section there is not enough bed
movement to avoid clogging as illustrated in Fig. 15.
For temperatures in the range of 275–360 -C the aluminum
forms a coarse coating that does not fully cover the glass beads
(Fig. 13). Again, the propensity towards agglomeration
requires superficial fluidizing velocities of at least 4 cm/s, i.e.
well above the minimum fluidization velocity (Fig. 8) to ensure
good mixing throughout the bed.
At further increased temperatures in the range of 400–
500 -C the reaction takes place all over the surface resulting in
a complete and uniform coating of small grain size. There was
almost no difference observed between the three types of glass
(Fig. 14). Type C (Plus9beads) shows the most even layer
morphology; the grain size is too small to be seen at this
magnification. On Fig. 14 B there is a scratch on the aluminum
Fig. 12. Deposits formed at 235 -C (u =8.1 cm/s) on glass type A (Spheriglas) (A) N
film providing a slight insight into the film thickness. The
surface diffusivity allows reacting species to migrate to a
growth site along the surface and on the already deposited
aluminum [12]. At higher temperatures of the surface this
diffusivity increases as well as the reaction rate does. Once an
energy threshold is reached, these species decompose on the
spot to deposit elemental aluminum, leading to more flat and
even layers.
4.1.3. Layer thickness
By dissolving the coating with 30% HCl/H2O2 and OES/
ICP analysis the aluminum mass on the glass was determined.
Assuming a plane surface the layer thickness can be calculated
using the known Sauter diameter. The results are shown in
Table 1.
To compare the calculated layer thickness with experimental
results, one sample was cooled down in liquid nitrogen and
crushed into fragments to achieve a brittle fracture of the
aluminum (Fig. 16). It can be seen that the deposit layer is not
uniform and shows the typical equiaxed structure of crystal
growth occurring at conditions T /Tm>0.5 [14], where Tm
denotes the melting temperature. The assumption of a porosity
of the coating therefore had to be considered. The calculated
thickness of 217 nm for a porosity of the coating of 40% is in
good agreement with the observed order of magnitude.
4.1.4. Deposition rate
To achieve a constant dosage of precursor the carrier gas
flow rate through the bubbler operated at 80T0.5 -C was kept
constant at 0.0035 g/s. The deposited mass of aluminum (also
aOH-washed and B) HCl-washed, the white bar indicates the length of 10 Am).
Fig. 14. Deposits formed at 400–500 -C on different glass types, A) SwarcoForce, u =10.8 cm/s; B) Spheriglas, u =12.1 cm/s; C) Plus9beads, u =11.4 cm/s; all
NaOH-washed, the white bar indicates the length of 10 Am.
Fig. 13. Deposits formed at 275–360 -C on different glass types, (A) SwarcoForce, u =10.1 cm/s; B) Spheriglas, u =9.6 cm/s; C) Plus9beads, u =8.8 cm/s; the white
bar indicates the length of 10 Am).
G.S. Czok, J. Werther / Powder Technology 162 (2006) 100–110 107
Table 1) on the different glass substrates for this constant
nitrogen flow rate through the bubbler within 30 min is
compared with the data of Liu et al. [7] to derive the deposition
kinetics. Different from these latter authors we related the
deposited mass of aluminum to the glass surface area available
for the deposition, assuming the following expression for the
deposition rate:
DmAl
Dt¼ kSlocalCTIBA;local ð1Þ
The calculated overall deposition rates are plotted in the
manner of an Arrhenius plot for the three glass types and the
Fig. 15. A) Agglomerates formed due to excessive growth, B
recalculated data from Liu et al. [7] (Fig. 17), showing one
range with temperature dependence and one range, that is
independent from temperature. The latter one is dominated by
mass transport limitation while the temperature dependence is
caused by the deposition rate depending on the reaction
temperature. The apparent activation energy EA can be
obtained from the slope of the temperature dependent section
of the Arrhenius plot. The glass type B (Spheriglas) shows
deposition rates very close to the data obtained by Liu et al. [7]
for a high reflex glass. But the slope of the temperature
dependent part and the resulting values for EA is a little
different. The other two glass types show a much smaller value
) solid neck C) agglomerated glass beads at the nozzle.
Table 1
Experimental results of gaseous precursor injection obtained with a constant mass flow rate of the carrier gas of 0.0035 g/s and an operation time of 30 min
Glass type Temperature Deposited mass Al per mass glass mg Al/m2 glass Calculated layer thickness Deposition rate r
T [-C] [mg/kg] [nm] [mg/(m2 s)]
Type A SwarcoForce 235 4400 92 33 0.051
250 269 106 2 0.060
275 4800 24 36 0.014
280 652 130 5 0.073
292 5430 138 41 0.078
297 6325 201 48 0.114
316 5400 189 41 0.107
350 10030 317 76 0.179
362 3300 186 25 0.105
392 6500 196 49 0.111
400 19500 399 147 0.226
402 11400 220 86 0.124
450 5900 121 45 0.085
500 17200 352 130 0.200
Type B Spheriglas 253 3236 96 67 0.068
259 3701 110 110 0.079
262 6050 180 159 0.070
268 8721 259 165 0.180
293 9040 269 170 0.171
318 9300 276 209 0.154
350 11450 340 140 0.133
375 7681 228 223 0.156
400 12250 364 140 0.202
Type C Plus9beads 247 751 35 13 0.023
250 2110 99 38 0.024
271 2190 102 39 0.049
275 1890 88 34 0.022
286 2839 133 51 0.083
306 8739 409 157 0.257
358 882 41 16 0.353
380 8094 379 145 0.241
410 16250 760 292 0.423
500 450 400 350 300 250
0.12 0.11 0.10 0.09
E =163.4 kJ/mol
T, °C
u, m/s
G.S. Czok, J. Werther / Powder Technology 162 (2006) 100–110108
for EA, that could be caused by surface roughness or higher
aluminum content within the glass matrix.
4.2. Injection of the liquid precursor
It has to be stated here, that the experiments for spray
injection of liquid TIBA precursor needed quite some testing
to find out a working setup and feasible operating conditions.
Special care has to be taken to avoid blocking of the nozzle
orifice by solids formed inside the system by TIBA reacting
Fig. 16. Fracture of type A glass coated by injection of gaseous precursor at
500 -C bed temperature (u =12 cm/s).
with air or moisture. A sieve screen of 40 Am mesh size was
placed directly in the precursor feed line in front of the
nozzle block to overcome this problem. Another challenge
was to avoid defluidization of the bed due to the formation of
0.0014 0.0016 0.0018 0.0020
-6
-5
-4
-3
-2
-1
EA=159.3 kJ/mol
EA=87.2 kJ/mol
A
EA=102.1 kJ/mol
SwarcoForce Spheriglas Plus9beads Liu et. al. (2000) [7]
ln r
, 10-6
kg A
l / m
2 s
1/T, K-1
Fig. 17. Deposition rates at different temperatures for constant carrier-gas mass
flow rate of 0.0035 g/s; the resulting superficial velocities in the fluidized bed
are plotted on the additional scale on top of the Fig. For comparison, the results
obtained by Liu et al. [7] have also been plotted in this graph (the velocity scale
is not valid in this latter case).
Fig. 18. A) Liquid spray of 12.5 g, TIBA onto 75 g glass within 15 min (bottom spray, u =18 cm/s, 1.11 I10�2 gTIBA/gglass min) and B) gaseous injection of 0.7 g
TIBA onto 4.8 g glass within 30 min (4.86 I10 �3 gTIBA/gglass min, u =10.1 cm/s). Both type A glass at 330 -C bed temperature.
G.S. Czok, J. Werther / Powder Technology 162 (2006) 100–110 109
agglomerates; this occurred preferably at the thermocouples
and near the nozzle outlet. In case of the bottom spray the
fluidizing gas was not preheated to prevent clogging of the
nozzle; this led to some temperature gradients within the bed.
Due to the cooling effect of evaporating TIBA the experi-
ments were conducted at bed temperatures above 300 -C to
prevent larger amounts of unreacted TIBA vapor from
condensing in the filter or vent line. Extensive testing
showed that the fluidization velocity created by the nozzle
gas had to be kept above 15 cm/s in order to prevent the
formation of agglomerates with subsequent defluidization of
the bed.
First, the results achieved with the 100 Am orifice insert in
the nozzle (cf. Fig. 5) and a fluidization velocity of 18 cm/s in
bottom spray mode are compared with the morphologies
obtained by injection of gaseous precursor (Fig. 18).
Both deposits were generated at the same fluidized bed
temperature of 330 -C and no significant difference could be
seen between both samples at first look. The surfaces are
completely covered by small grains and larger piles of grains
are visible. These piles might be the effect of either solids
formed in the gas phase or of attrited fines. This fine material
may adhere to the surface by van der Waals forces.
At closer observation of a sample coated by liquid spray
injection in the side spray arrangement, some beads could be
found with a flake-like structure (Fig. 19). Less than about 5%
of the total bed material exhibited these structures, which might
be traces of the formation of agglomerates with liquid TIBA
bridges leading to locally high deposition rates on the particles
in the agglomerate.
Fig. 19. Deposits formed at 320 -C by liquid injection of 7 g TIBA onto
The side spray setup with preheating of the fluidizing gas
was used. The gas flow rate for the two-fluid nozzle was kept
constant at 7.5 l/min (STP) to ensure homogeneous atomization
of the liquid. At fluidization velocities larger than 10 cm/s the
spray rate of 1.8 gTIBA/min did not lead to defluidization or the
formation of agglomerates visible with the eye for an operation
time of 10 min. No significant differences could be observed
between the samples produced with side spray mode and
bottom spray mode with respect to the quality of the coating.
For fluidization velocities lower than 5 cm/s slight agglomer-
ation was observed after 10 min of operation. The agglomer-
ates were few and very fragile, breaking up to powder at the
lightest contact.
Fig. 20 shows a brittle fracture of a very thick deposit layer
generated in side spray mode by spraying 80 g of liquid TIBA
onto 115 g glass beads within 20 min at 340 -C fluidized bed
temperature, using the 300 Am orifice nozzle insert at a
fluidization velocity of 8.6 cm/s (calculated without nozzle
gas). This experiment led to the formation of a thick layer of
agglomerates on the reactor walls and the temperature probes,
while approximately 70% of the bed material was not
agglomerated. The sample used in Fig. 20 was part of the
non-agglomerated bed material. The calculated layer thickness
for this experiment is 583 nm, assuming a planar surface and a
density of 2600 kg/m3 for the aluminum film. This calculation
does not include losses due to attrition of the deposits. Because
of the porosity of the coarse, voluminous deposits formed at
this temperature, the observed thickness in Fig. 20 is of the
order of magnitude of 1.5 Am. One can spot almost identical
structures of the aluminum in both pictures (Figs. 16 and 20),
75 g type A glass beads within app. 5 min (side spray, u =15 cm/s).
Fig. 20. Fracture of type A glass coated by liquid precursor injection of 80 g
TIBA onto 115 g glass at 340 -C (side spray, u =8.6 cm/s).
G.S. Czok, J. Werther / Powder Technology 162 (2006) 100–110110
indicating similar growth conditions at the surfaces in both
experiments.
5. Conclusions
CVD coating of particles in the fluidized bed is feasible and
provides a good means for the treatment of larger quantities of
powders in a cost-efficient way. For the thermal decomposition
of TIBA onto different glass types it could be shown that a
minimum temperature of about 400 -C is required to achieve a
compact and relatively even aluminum layer. At lower
temperatures, the reaction preferably takes place on already
deposited aluminum leading to voluminous deposits.
The injection of gaseous precursor in this geometry requires
a superficial gas velocity of at least 4 cm/s and reaction
temperatures above 400 -C to achieve even layers without
agglomerates.
The results further demonstrate that liquid injection of TIBA
by a two-fluid nozzle is feasible to produce aluminum coatings,
even for glass beads with a Sauter-diameter of only 46 Am. The
tendency towards agglomeration and clogging of the fluidized
bed is much higher for the injection of liquid than for gaseous
precursor. While for the introduction of the gaseous precursor,
the feed rate is limited by the saturation capacity of the carrier
gas, liquid injection allows higher precursor fluxes resulting in
shorter operation times. The reduction of the operating time to
roughly one third reduces the extent of attrition of the deposited
layers while the risk of defluidization due to agglomeration is
increased, which has to be overcome by suitable geometrical
setup and operating conditions.
Nomenclature
cTIBA,local local TIBA concentration, kg/kg
dp particle diameter, m
dp surface mean diameter, AmEA apparent activation energy, J
k reaction rate constant, kg/m2 s
Q3 cumulative mass fraction,�Slocal local particle surface area, m2
T temperature, K
Tm melting temperature, K
u superficial gas velocity, m/s
umf minimum fluidization velocity, m/s
DmAl differential change in aluminum mass, kg
Dt differential change in time, s
Acknowledgements
This work was funded by the German Research Foundation
(Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG) under grant no. WE
935 / 8-1.
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