TY - JOUR
T1 - Potential analysis of smart flow processing and micro process technology for fastening process development - Use of chemistry and process design as intensification fields
AU - Hessel, V.
AU - Vural - Gursel, I.
AU - Wang, Q.
AU - Noël, T.
AU - Lang, J.
PY - 2012
Y1 - 2012
N2 - Flow processes with microstructured reactors allow paradigm changes in process
development and thus can enable a faster development time to the final production
plant. They do this by exploiting similarity effects along the development
chain (modularity) and intensification. The final result can be a (significantly) reduced
number of apparatus in the plant, a (significantly) reduced apparatus size,
and a higher predictability in the scale-out of the apparatus. So far, this was
mainly achieved via transport intensification given in microstructured reactors –
improved mixing and heat transfer which increase productivity and possibly improve
selectivity. A more new idea is chemical intensification through deliberate
use of harsh chemistries at unusual (high) pressure, temperature, concentration,
and reaction environment which again increases productivity. A very new idea is
the process design intensification – the reaction-maximized flow processes need
less separation expenditure and the small unit size together with the high degree
in functionality gives large potential for system integration. Both means change
and simplify the process scheme totally which can lead to a reduced number of
apparatus and has impact on predictability. The modular nature of the small flow
units allow an easy implementation to modern modular plant environments (Future
Factories) which enables to perform all the testing cycles (lab, pilot, production)
in one plant environment; an example are here container plants. All these
measures have large potential for (much) decreased overall development time.
AB - Flow processes with microstructured reactors allow paradigm changes in process
development and thus can enable a faster development time to the final production
plant. They do this by exploiting similarity effects along the development
chain (modularity) and intensification. The final result can be a (significantly) reduced
number of apparatus in the plant, a (significantly) reduced apparatus size,
and a higher predictability in the scale-out of the apparatus. So far, this was
mainly achieved via transport intensification given in microstructured reactors –
improved mixing and heat transfer which increase productivity and possibly improve
selectivity. A more new idea is chemical intensification through deliberate
use of harsh chemistries at unusual (high) pressure, temperature, concentration,
and reaction environment which again increases productivity. A very new idea is
the process design intensification – the reaction-maximized flow processes need
less separation expenditure and the small unit size together with the high degree
in functionality gives large potential for system integration. Both means change
and simplify the process scheme totally which can lead to a reduced number of
apparatus and has impact on predictability. The modular nature of the small flow
units allow an easy implementation to modern modular plant environments (Future
Factories) which enables to perform all the testing cycles (lab, pilot, production)
in one plant environment; an example are here container plants. All these
measures have large potential for (much) decreased overall development time.
U2 - 10.1002/ceat.201200038
DO - 10.1002/ceat.201200038
M3 - Article
SN - 0930-7516
VL - 35
SP - 1184
EP - 1204
JO - Chemical Engineering & Technology
JF - Chemical Engineering & Technology
IS - 7
ER -