Abstract
Hundreds of grams of calcined cerium dioxide (CeO2) microspheres with the smallest possible diameters were produced using the Âé¶¹Ó°Òô gelation process for crush strength studies. To achieve the small sizes required, a modified Âé¶¹Ó°Òô gelation system was employed, which utilized a two-fluid nozzle, two static mixers for turbulent flow, and 2-ethyl-1-hexanol as the medium for gel formation at 333ï€338 K. This effort generated over 400 g of 75−150 µm and 300 g of <75 µm CeO2 microspheres. The typical product yields for the 75−150 µm and <75 µm microspheres were 70 and 99 %, respectively, with a typical throughput of 65−72 g of CeO2 microspheres per test. In comparison, the uranium microspheres produced from the same system had a much wider size distribution, which is more typical of two-fluid nozzle system based on previous experience. The fraction of air-dried uranium microspheres smaller than 150 µm was typically 50% or less. The higher yield of very small cerium spheres lead to challenges and modifications, which are discussed in detail.