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Role of steam as a medium for droplet crystallization

Version 2 2024-06-04, 11:01
Version 1 2019-06-28, 13:16
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-04, 11:01 authored by A Lum, N Cardamone, R Beliavski, S Mansouri, Karen Hapgood, MW Woo
Mannitol and sodium chloride (NaCl) were spray dried using a counter current superheated spray dryer. Superheated steam was found to induce relatively high nucleation during the solidification of the sprayed droplets when compared to hot air. This allowed the production of spherical mannitol particles with very fine crystals at a lower temperature. In addition, superheated steam led to the formation of unique salt microspheres consisting of hollow hopperlike sodium chloride crystals. These unique particle morphologies were not observed in hot air spray drying. Further analysis revealed that higher droplet temperature during the constant rate drying period, under superheated steam conditions, led to the high nucleation phenomenon. Results from this work illustrate the potential of superheated steam as a useful medium for in situ crystallization control in spray dryers.

History

Journal

Industrial and engineering chemistry research

Volume

58

Pagination

8517-8524

Location

Washington, D.C.

ISSN

0888-5885

eISSN

1520-5045

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2019, American Chemical Society

Issue

19

Publisher

American Chemical Society

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