| Literature DB >> 31940863 |
Zhengya Dong1, Claire Delacour1, Keiran Mc Carogher1, Aniket Pradip Udepurkar1, Simon Kuhn1.
Abstract
Ultrasonic small scale flow reactors have found increasing popularity among researchers as they serve as a very useful platform for studying and controlling ultrasound mechanisms and effects. This has led to the use of these reactors for not only research purposes, but also various applications in biological, pharmaceutical and chemical processes mostly on laboratory and, in some cases, pilot scale. This review summarizes the state of the art of ultrasonic flow reactors and provides a guideline towards their design, characterization and application. Particular examples for ultrasound enhanced multiphase processes, spanning from immiscible fluid-fluid to fluid-solid systems, are provided. To conclude, challenges such as reactor efficiency and scalability are addressed.Entities:
Keywords: flow chemistry; microfluidics; process intensification; sonochemistry; ultrasound
Year: 2020 PMID: 31940863 PMCID: PMC7014228 DOI: 10.3390/ma13020344
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1Representation of the key concepts behind ultrasonic small scale flow reactors. Firstly, (a) the different phenomena associated with high and low frequency ultrasound, (b) the ultrasonic frequency () and the corresponding wavelength () in water, (c) the cavitation bubble resonance size for low frequency ultrasound (20 kHz–1 MHz) and (d) how the associated ultrasonic phenomena match the typical size range of micro and milli-reactor channels.
Figure 2Effect of bubble radius on their cavitation behavior under ultrasound at a frequency of 20 kHz and a load power of 20 W. Bubble cavitation behavior was observed using a high-speed camera at an interval of 12.5 µs, equaling to a quarter of ultrasound oscillating period. Reprinted with permission from [24], copyright John Wiley and Sons.
Figure 3Focusing of polystyrene particles in a microchannel by high frequency ultrasound (1.21 MHz and 15 Vpp) for different particle sizes (2–10 µm). The images in each row were taken at different channel positions with the channel length and thus residence time increasing from CH1 to CH5. Reprinted with permission from [49], copyright Royal Society of Chemistry.
Figure 4Representative examples of four categories of ultrasonic flow reactors. (a) Picture of a piezoelectric plate reactor developed by Dong et al., the reactor consists of a piezoelectric plate glued to the bottom of a silicon plate microreactor, reprinted with permission from [93], copyright Elsevier. (b) Capillary microreactor immersed in an ultrasonic bath, reprinted with permission from [97], copyright Elsevier. (c) Sketch of a Langevin-type transducer indirectly coupled reactor, reprinted with permission from [98], copyright Elsevier. (d) Sketch of a Langevin-type transducer directly coupled reactor, reprinted with permission from [34] copyright Royal Society of Chemistry.
Summary of major characterization methods and the corresponding objectives and procedures.
| Method | Type of Method | Objectives | Materials | Reference |
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| Sonochemiluminescence of luminol | Experimental, | Observation of cavitation activity distribution | Aqueous solution of luminol and sodium hydroxide. | [ |
| Dosimetries: salicylic acid, Fricke, Weissler, terephthalic acid | Experimental, | General cavitation activity measurement, cavitation yield | Analysis method: spectrophotometry, HPLC analysis. | [ |
| Hydrophone measurement | Experimental, | Acoustic pressure mapping. Observation of standing waves. | Hydrophone probe, oscilloscope. | [ |
| Temperature mapping | Experimental, | Temperature mapping to observe hot spots. | Thermal camera. | [ |
| Calorimetric measurement | Experimental, | Temperature rise measurements. Estimation of power density. | Temperature probe. | [ |
| Impedance measurement | Experimental, | Resonance conditions: resonance and anti-resonance frequency. | Impedance analyzer | [ |
| Pressure acoustic mapping | Numerical, | Helmholtz equation | Numerical simulation software | [ |
| Simulation of primary and secondary effect | Numerical, | Temperature, bubble yield | Numerical simulation software | [ |
Figure 5Reaction yield for the hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyl in a stirred batch reactor, unsonicated (silent) flow reactor, direct contact ultrasonic flow reactor and the five interval contact ultrasonic flow reactor, reproduced with permission from [106] and [108], copyright Elsevier.
Figure 6Schematic of the capillary sonocrystallizer setup used by Valitov et al. to study the effect of acoustic streaming on crystallization, reprinted with permission from [105], copyright Elsevier. The feed solution was pumped through the pre-cooling section to reach supersaturation and underwent sonocrystallization in the sonication section.
Summary of the different applications and process enhancement in ultrasonic flow reactors.
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| Cavitation to improve mixing of dye and water | Langevin-type transducer reactor, direct coupling | Laboratory scale | [ |
| Cavitation to improve mixing of glycerol and water | Piezoelectric plate reactor | Laboratory scale | [ | |
| Ultrasound assisted nitration of toluene | Langevin-type transducer reactor, hybrid contact | Laboratory scale | [ | |
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| Cavitation and surface wave oscillation to improve gas-liquid mass transfer for carbon dioxide absorption | Langevin-type transducer reactor, direct coupling | Laboratory scale | [ |
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| Sonication to partially fluidize a micro-packed-bed reactor to reduce gas-channeling | Langevin-type transducer reactor, direct coupling | Laboratory scale | [ |
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| Surface wave oscillation with the introduction of a gas phase to improve liquid-liquid extraction | Langevin-type transducer reactor, direct coupling | Laboratory scale | [ |
| piezoelectric plate reactor | Laboratory scale | [ | ||
| Ultrasound assisted reactive extraction of p-nitrophenylacetate | Langevin-type transducer reactor, direct contact | Laboratory scale | [ | |
| Langevin-type transducer reactor, hybrid contact | Scale up strategy: scale out | [ | ||
| Cavitation to emulsify and improve mixing for the extraction of rhodamine B from water to 1-octanol | Langevin-type transducer reactor, direct coupling | Laboratory scale | [ | |
| Ultrasound for oil-water emulsion and PLGA nanoparticle synthesis | Langevin-type transducer reactor, indirect coupling | Laboratory scale | [ | |
| Cavitation to enhance emulsification of hexadecane in SDS aqueous emulsion | Ultrasonic bath reactor | Laboratory and large scale | [ | |
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| Cavitation leading to milder reaction conditions applied to Dumbbell shaped Au-Pd nanoparticle synthesis | Piezoelectric plate reactor | Laboratory scale | [ |
| Cavitation to prevent of clogging for AgCl nanoparticle synthesis | Ultrasonic bath reactor | Laboratory scale | [ | |
| Cavitation to change structure of ZnO quantum dots due to high energy hotspots | Ultrasonic bath reactor | Laboratory scale | [ | |
| Cavitation to promote uniform particle shape and size, improved crystal quality applied to precipitation of hydroxyapatite. | Reactor type 1: ultrasonic bath reactor | Laboratory scale | [ | |
| Cavitation for clogging prevention, particle size control applied to barium sulfate precipitation | Langevin-type transducer reactor, direct coupling | Laboratory scale | [ | |
| Acoustophoresis for clogging prevention, particle size control applied to particle synthesis | Piezoelectric plate reactor | Laboratory scale | [ | |
| Combining cavitation and acoustophoresis for particle synthesis | Piezoelectric plate reactor | Laboratory scale | [ | |
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| Cavitation for clogging prevention applied to C–N cross coupling reaction | Ultrasonic bath reactor | Laboratory scale | [ |
| Ultrasonic bath reactor | Laboratory scale | [ | ||
| Piezoelectric plate reactor | Laboratory scale | [ | ||
| Cavitation for clogging prevention applied to KMnO4 oxidation | Ultrasonic bath reactor | Laboratory scale | [ | |
| Cavitation for clogging prevention applied to photodimerization of maleic anhydride | Ultrasonic bath reactor | Laboratory scale | [ | |
| Cavitation for clogging prevention applied to arylation of aryl bromides | Ultrasonic bath reactor | Laboratory scale | [ | |
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| Enhanced nucleation with ultrasound for adipic acid crystallization | Langevin-type transducer reactor, indirect coupling | Laboratory scale | [ |
| Enhanced anti-solvent mixing, reduced induction times and anti-solvent crystallization at a lower supersaturation with ultrasound for acetyl salicylic acid crystallization | Langevin-type transducer reactor, hybrid contact | Laboratory scale | [ | |
| Increased nucleation rate and smaller crystals size with pulsed ultrasound for adipic acid crystallization | Piezoelectric plate reactor | Scale up strategy: micro to milliscale | [ | |
| Backmixing lead to lower yield, smaller crystal size with ultrasound | Langevin-type transducer reactor, indirect coupling | Laboratory scale | [ | |
| Cavitation for clogging prevention applied to crystallization processes (Patent) | Piezoelectric plate reactor | Scale up strategy: micro to milliscale and parallel numbering-up | [ | |
| Langevin-type transducer reactor, direct coupling | Scale up strategy: micro to milliscale and parallel numbering up | [ | ||
| Langevin-type transducer reactor, indirect coupling | Scale up strategy: micro to milliscale | [ |
Figure 7Examples of scaled-up reactor designs: (a) cavitation intensification bag immersed in an ultrasonic bath (numbering up), reprinted with permission from [143], copyright Elsevier. (b) Scale out strategy for sonocrystallization, reactor consisting of a piezoelectric plate attached to a glass capillary, reprinted with permission from [128], copyright ACS publications. (c) Scale out strategy for liquid–liquid extraction, reactor consisting of PFA tubing immersed in an hybrid ultrasonic reactor, reprinted with permission from [115], copyright Elsevier. (d) Combination of scale out and numbering up strategies for a sonocrystallization process, reactor consisting of a sonotrode and a reactor wrapped as a helix around the sonotrode, reprinted with permission from the authors [149].