Ok - yesterday I messed up & lost what I spent three hours working on for a post - so will try again today
How does the atomizer power head that I and Sam have posted pictures of work
It works by high pressure water spray hitting the molten metal & busting the molten metal into small/fine particles (or a shear factor)
How small/fine particles the molten metal will bust into depends on a number of factors
1) Pressure - pressure is the force that does the busting apart of the metal when it (pressure) hits the metal - higher pressure means more force - more force means more effective busting --- less pressure in turn means less force which in turn means (edit to add word
less here) effective busting
2) Disbursement of water delivered by the high pressure spray - this is determined by the nozzles orifice size as well the angle of the "water fan" coming out the nozzle with both effecting the shear factor
Orifices size has an effect on the size of the water droplets coming out the orifice (under pressure) smaller droplets have more energy then larger droplets --- fan angle - a large fan distributes the water AND energy over a larger area then a small fan
3) Angle at which the spray hits the molten metal as the molten metal passes through the spray also effects shear
4) Water volume (GPM) - there needs to be enough water in combination with the three above factors to optimize shear
5) Rate (speed & amount) of molten metal poured through the spray
All of these things have a direct effect on particle size produced by the shear energy to bust the metal according to system design
Regardless of system design - you are not going to get 100% of a given particle size (as in 100% of 50 mesh, 100 mesh, or 200 mesh, 300 mesh)
Reather - the system design will only determine the percentage of course - fine - ultra fine particles produced by the system
Sam was good enough to provide us pics of his system using a 1000 PSI 1.6 GPM pressure washer
Sam's system - though certainly doing a good job of "busting" the metal it also shows a relatively high percentage of course particle size
Here is a pic of the end product using a system with more pressure & more GPM (3000 - 3500 pressure delivering 6.8 - 7.5 GPM)
This pic is a bit deceiving because as you can see it is wet so the particles are clumped together making it look like it is much courser then it actually is
I have another pic of the same material dried but it's in a "paper" document (instead of a document on my computer) & I don't have a scanner to scan it & download it
Based on that picture (of the dry material) it is producing a large percentage of true powder ranging from course (80 mesh) to ultrafine (300 minus mesh)
The bottom line being (as already said) no matter the system - you will get a range of particle size - so sifting will be required if you are after a "classified" particle size --- and again the system will (at least to some degree) determine percentage of course to fine to ultrafine
One more note - regardless of the system - you will have some metal that goes through as "over size" (greater in size then powder) percentage of that will again be determined by the system design &/or the 5 above points
This post was to provide info concerning the principle behind producing metal powder with a pressure washer
My next posting will be to provide more details on actual design of the system
Kurt