Abstract

Abstract The spinning disc reactor (SDR) uses surface rotation to produce thin film flow with improved mixing and reduced residence times in chemical processing applications. Solvent-antisolvent precipitation is one such process that can benefit from these properties. This study investigates the film hydrodynamics and precipitation of starch nanoparticles by contacting starch dissolved in sodium hydroxide with ethanol as the antisolvent. One objective of this study is to understand how interactions of the disc surface topography (grooved and smooth) with other parameters such as liquid flowrate, antisolvent to solvent flow ratio and disc speed impact the mixing and precipitation processes. Results indicate that an increase in flow rate and rotational speed leads to smaller nano-particles and narrower size distributions, which is attributed to increased shear and instabilities within the liquid film. It was also observed that an increased antisolvent to solvent ratio caused a reduction in particle size, as increased antisolvent generated higher supersaturation. Results showed that although particle size was not significantly influenced by the disc texture, the size distribution was narrower and higher yields were obtained with the grooved disc surface. The grooved disc therefore offers the opportunity for higher throughput in the solvent-antisolvent precipitation of starch particles with better product quality.

Highlights

  • It has been observed that the residence time distribution is narrower with the grooved disc surface [7]

  • For reactive crystallisation processes, crystals produced on a grooved disc surface have been reported to be smaller in size, with a narrow size distribution than those produced on a smooth disc [14]

  • There is a general decline in particle size and Polydispersity Index (PdI) value as flow rate increases

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Summary

Introduction

The texture of the disc surface has been shown to affect hydrodynamics, wave formation [19], and residence time distribution [7]. It has been observed that the residence time distribution is narrower with the grooved disc surface [7]. Additional use of grooved disc has been reported in processes such as polymerisation [10] and nanoparticle production [20]. Parameters such as flow rate and disc rotational speed have been shown to have further effect on liquid film interaction with the textured discs, influencing the residence time distribution and SDR hydrodynamics [7]

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