Nanotechnology

Flame emission spectroscopy of single droplet micro explosions


Nanoparticles exhibit superior physical and chemical properties, making them highly desirable for various applications. Flame spray pyrolysis (FSP) is a versatile technique for synthesizing size and composition-controlled metal oxide/sulfide nanoparticles through a gas-phase reaction. To understand the fundamental mechanisms governing nanoparticle formation in FSP, simplified single-droplet experiments have proven to unravel the physicochemical mechanisms of liquid metal precursor combustions. This work introduces a novel method using flame emission spectroscopy and high-speed imaging to analyze combustion species and metal release during metalorganic single droplet combustions, at the example of the 2-Ethylhexanoci acid (EHA) – Tetrahydrothiophene (THT) – Mesitylcopper (MiCu) precursor system. The method enables the tracing of precursor components released from droplet into the flame by spatial and temporal resolved emission tracking from combustion species (OH*, CH*, C2*, CS*, CS2*) and atomic spectral lines (Cu I). The tracking of metal emission enables the direct observation of the particle formation route, offering novel insights into the metalorganic precursor combustions. The findings of this work show a direct correlation between micro-explosions and nanoparticle formation through the gas-to-particle route. The release of copper emissions is observed with the micro-explosion event, marking the micro-explosions as the critical mechanism for the metal release and subsequent nanoparticle formation during the combustion process. The results indicate a metalorganic viscous shell formation (THT+MiCu) leading to the micro explosion. The EHA/THT ratio significantly affects the combustion behavior. Lower ratios lead to a gradual copper release before the micro explosion; higher ratios shorten the copper release and delay the micro explosion – the highest ratio results in two distinct burning stages.