Dextran-induced modifications of calcium carbonate particles precipitated during carbonatation

2019 ◽  
pp. 382-391
Author(s):  
Karin Abraham ◽  
Liza Splett ◽  
Eckhard Flöter

The effects of high and low molecular mass dextran (T2000 and T40) on the size and shape of particles precipitated during carbonatation and their correlation with filtration performances were key to this study. Varying contents of T2000 and T40 dextran in sugar solutions corresponding to DS contents of thin juice were investigated. For particle size and shape analysis, static image analysis and laser particle size analysis were used. Both methods, static image analysis and laser diffraction, revealed that the presence of T2000 and T40 dextran leads to a higher amount of large-sized particles at the expense of small-sized particles, indicating pronounced agglomeration. The additional evaluation of shape parameters (circularity, roundness, solidity) obtained from static image analysis indicates that the agglomeration is oriented in the absence and in the presence of lower T40 dextran levels. Besides, non-oriented agglomeration, resulting in more round agglomerates with smoother surfaces, was found for samples loaded with T2000 dextran and high T40 dextran levels. Only the latter samples have shown to negatively affect the filtration performance. Thus, in the presence of T2000 dextran and high T40 dextran levels, the filtration was hampered. This appears to be mainly caused by a tighter packing of more round calcium carbonate agglomerates in the porous structure of the filter cake.

2007 ◽  
Vol 121-123 ◽  
pp. 893-896
Author(s):  
Zheng Min Li

To investigate the effect of magnification (M) on determination of particle size and shape by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and image analysis. The calibration curve and its simulative equation of TEM magnification are obtained by measurement of a grating replica standard specimen at different magnifications. Based on the analysis of TEM images at a series of magnifications for a 350nm-sphere standard sample, It has been found that the two errors of its size measurement, caused by one pixel change of the pixel number per particle diameter (Np) and by one gray value change during thresholding, is smaller, and the shape of ‘circle’ particles are close to the standard one, while Np is larger than 35. It can be seen that the suitable TEM magnification is in inverse proportion to particle size and it can be calculated by given equation.


Materials ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (13) ◽  
pp. 2045 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dapeng Zheng ◽  
Haibin Yang ◽  
Feng Yu ◽  
Bo Zhang ◽  
Hongzhi Cui

The effect of graphene oxide (GO) on the crystallization of calcium carbonate (CaCO3) is explored in this paper. Precipitation of CaCO3 was carried out by bubbling carbon dioxide (CO2) through tricalcium silicate (C3S) hydration solution with different graphene oxide admixture contents (0.2%, 1% and 2% mass ratios based on C3S). The polymorph, morphology, crystal size and particle size of CaCO3 were evaluated using X-ray diffraction (XRD), an environmental scanning electronic microscope (ESEM), and laser particle size analysis. The results showed that addition of GO was able to promote the conversion of CaCO3 to a calcite crystal phase with higher thermal stability and crystallinity than the control. However, as the dosage of GO increased, the growth of the calcite crystal particles was somewhat suppressed, resulting in a decrease in the crystal particle size and a narrow particle size distribution. When the amount of GO was 0.2%, 1% and 2%, the crystal size of the calcite was 5.49%, 12.38%, and 24.61% lower than that of the sample without GO, respectively, while the particle size of the calcite also decreased by 17.21%, 39.26%, 58.03%, respectively.


Geofluids ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
Zhigang Zhang ◽  
Xiangyun Lan ◽  
Guangcai Wen ◽  
Qingming Long ◽  
Xuelin Yang

Particle size and shape distribution can be measured in great detail by dynamic image analysis (DIA). The narrow dispersion of repeated experiment results indicates that the particle size distribution can be obtained with high reliability. Particle size distribution can be better fitted to Rosin-Rammler equation than Gaudin-Schuhmann distribution and the lognormal distribution. The spread parameter ( m ) and the location parameters ( d 0 ) of the Rosin-Rammler equation can be calculated precisely. We analyzed the similarities and differences between the different particle shape distributions. The distributions of form factor and circularity are right-skewed distributions, while the distributions of ellipse ratio, irregularity, and aspect ratio obey a normal distribution. By studying the relation between particle size and shape, we find a linear relationship between the ellipse ratio and the Legendre ellipse diameter on the logarithmic scale.


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