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Micro Process Technology

Langue : Anglais

Auteurs :

Couverture de l’ouvrage Micro Process Technology
This handbook covers the fundamentals on the design of micro process devices and their microfluidics, including their use for production or as laboratory tools, their fabrication technology and their characterisation, as well as their integration and functionalisation.
Focusing on production cost improvements, safety, energy and reducing the environmental impact throughout each step of the process, the book discusses how this technology can aid in finding solutions for global challenges, such as energy generation and storage, synthesizing new materials with new properties and improved products, plus such economic aspects as the market, new products and supply chain management.
MICRO PROCESS TECHNOLOGY AND ITS SUPERORDINATE PROCESSING EMBEDMENT
Market and Environmental Constraints
Factory-of-the-Future Concepts
Sustainability and Life-Cycle Analysis
Green Chemistry
Green Engineering
Process Intensification
Flow Chemistry
Microreactors and Micro Process Technology
REACTION ENGINEERING POTENTIAL TRANSPORT INTENSIFICATION
REACTION ENGINEERING POTENTIAL CHEMICAL INTENSIFICATION ('NOVEL PROCESS WINDOWS')
Chemical Applicableness
Chemical Intensification through Harsh Conditions 'Novel Process Windows'
Chemical Intensification through High-Reactive Intermediates - 'Flash Chemistry'
PROCESS-DESIGN INTENSIFICATION ('NOVEL PROCESS WINDOWS')
MICROMIXERS
Mixing Principles
Active and Passive Micromixers
Diffusion-based Micromixers
Convection-based Micromixers
Chaotic Advection Micromixers
Turbulent Micromixers
Design and Making of Micromixers
Mixing Characterization, including Analytical Techniques used
Applications of Micromixer Technologies
MICRO HEAT EXCHANGERS
Heat Exchange Fundamentals
Classification of Micro Heat Exchanger
Heat Transfer Characterization and Enhancement
Fouling of Micro Heat Exchangers
Scale-Out of Micro Heat Exchangers
MICROEVAPORATORS
FLOW SEPARATIONS
State-of-the-Art in Flow Separation
Micro Extractors
Micro Distillators/
Rectificators
Micro Chromatography Devices
Micro Membrane Devices
Integrated Reaction-Separation Devices
CONCLUSIONS AND OUTLOOK
REFERENCES
Professor Volker Hessel, is a professor for Micro Flow Chemistry and Process Technology at the Department of Chemical Engineering and Chemistry, Technical University of Eindhoven, The Netherlands. His department focuses on micro process engineering, mixing with microstructured mixers, fine chemistry with micro process technology, fuel processing with micro process technology, cost analysis of micro process technology and scale out of micro process technology. He was awarded his Ph.D. from the University of Mainz in organic chemistry in 1993, investigating structure-property relations of supramolecular structures. After having been appointed Group Leader for Microreaction Technology at the IMM in 1996, he became head of the newly founded Department of Microreaction Technology in 1999. Until 2010 he was the Director of R&D and Head of the Chemical Process Technology Department at the Institute for Microtechnology Mainz, GmbH (IMM), Germany. In September, 2009, he was appointed an honorary professorship at the Technical Chemistry Department at Technical University of Darmstadt. He is author of more than 150 peer-reviewed publications in the fields of organic chemistry and chemical micro process engineering, 200 papers in total, five books and 15 patents.

Dr. Timothy Noel is an Assistant Professor within the Department of Chemical Engineering and Chemistry at the Eindhoven University of Technology, The Netherlands. Dr. Noel received his PhD from Ghent University, Belgium, in the field of transition metal catalysis, in 2009, under the supervision of Professor Johan Van der Eycken (2005-2009). After this Dr. Noel was a Postdoctoral researcher at Ghent University, Belgium, followed by a position at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA, as a Fulbright Postdoctoral Fellow with Professor Stephen L. Buchwald. At MIT, he worked on the development of new continuous-flow methods for cross-coupling chemistry at the MIT-Novartis Center for Continuous Manufacturing.