Scientists use a Teflon pipe to make a cheap, simple reactor for silica particle synthesis

Scientists use a Teflon pipe to make a cheap, simple reactor for silica particle synthesis
Experimental set-up of the microfluidic mixer for the synthesis of silica. Credit: Yang Hui

Researchers in Australia and China have proposed an innovative and cost-effective new method for creating silica beads, which have a number of key uses, ranging from nanomedicine and bioimaging to the production of paper and polished concrete.

The synthesis of silica particles for experimental and industrial uses began in the 1960s, and usually takes place in large batches, where controlled doping to induce functionality is difficult.

Control of the synthesis parameters can be achieved through costly and time-consuming small-scale microfluidic reactors that require photolithography, etching, bonding, and injection molding, which are prone to clogging.

Now, a surprisingly simple new approach has been demonstrated, and could be adopted for various applications at a low cost and with a high degree of reliability.

Researchers at the ARC Center of Excellence in Exciton Science, based at The University of Melbourne, and working with colleagues at South China Normal University, constructed a flow synthesis device using a polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), or "Teflon," pipe wound around a rod and connected to two syringes. Their results have been published in the Chemical Engineering Journal.

The key to the success of this approach is a spiral channel which promotes vortex flow characteristics, and this type of fluid flow encourages extremely efficient mixing of the precursor fluids.

"When this happens you now have this very cheap and quite efficient chemical reactor," corresponding author Dr. Eser Akinoglu said.

"Once you have the fluids in a tube that is spiraled, then due to these vortexes, they mix very quickly and … the overall reaction is more homogeneous, the product is homogeneous, and the silica particles have a uniform size and shape."

While this new mechanism is unlikely to replace industrial-scale batch manufacturing for the creation of pure silica particles, it could well rival the microfluidic approach used in synthesizing silica nanoparticles for specialized, niche applications, such as silica particles 'doped' with colorful dyes or encapsulating quantum dots for fluorescence.

"From a material costs perspective, it's very reasonable," Dr. Akinoglu said.

"For the future, this flow method is ideal for the introduction of new components into the reaction … you could put something else into this flow to mix together with the whole process and it will then be encapsulated in these particles."

More information: Hui Yang et al. A PTFE helical capillary microreactor for the high throughput synthesis of monodisperse silica particles, Chemical Engineering Journal (2020). DOI: 10.1016/j.cej.2020.126063

Provided by ARC Centre of Excellence in Exciton Science

Citation: Scientists use a Teflon pipe to make a cheap, simple reactor for silica particle synthesis (2020, July 1) retrieved 10 May 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2020-07-scientists-teflon-pipe-cheap-simple.html
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