Advanced Micro & Nanosystems (AMN) provides cutting-edge reviews and detailed case studies by top authors from science and industry, covering technologies, devices and advanced systems from the micro and nano worlds, which together have an immense innovative application potential that opens up with control of shape and function from the atomic level right up to the visible world without any technological gaps.
In this topical volume, authors from leading industrial players and research institutions present a concise and didactical introduction to Micro Process Engineering, the combination of microtechnology and process engineering into a most promising and powerful tool for revolutionizing chemical processes and industrial mass production of bulk materials, fine chemicals, pharmaceuticals and many other products.
The book takes the readers from the fundamentals of engineering methods, transport processes, and fluid dynamics to device conception, simulation and modelling, control interfaces and issues of modularity and compatibility. Fabrication strategies and techniques are examined next, focused on the fabrication of suitable microcomponents from various materials such as metals, polymers, silicon, ceramics and glass. The book concludes with actual applications and operational aspects of micro process systems, giving broad coverage to industrial efforts in America, Europe and Asia as well as laboratory equipment and education.
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((For series editors (Baltes, Brand, Fedder, Hierold, Korvink, Tabata) see www.amn.wiley-vch.de))
Dr.-Ing. Norbert Kockmann is scientific researcher at the chair of microsystem construction of the Institute of Microsystem Technology (IMTEK) of Freiburg University, Germany, since 2001. He began his studies of aerospace engineering in 1985 at the Technical University of Munich. After completing his diploma, he joined the production technology department at Bremen University in 1991 to obtain his Ph.D. in technical thermodynamics, heat and mass transfer.
In 1997, he joined the Messer Griesheim company as a trainee and went on to become project leader of a syngas plant for the production of carbon monoxide.
His research interests include the construction and manufacture of components for microsystems as well as the fundamental processes in microsystems.
Advanced Micro & Nanosystems (AMN) provides cutting-edge reviews and detailed case studies by top authors from science and industry, covering technologies, devices and advanced systems from the micro and nano worlds, which together have an immense innovative application potential that opens up with control of shape and function from the atomic level right up to the visible world without any technological gaps.<br> In this topical volume, authors from leading industrial players and research institutions present a concise and didactical introduction to Micro Process Engineering, the combination of microtechnology and process engineering into a most promising and powerful tool for revolutionizing chemical processes and industrial mass production of bulk materials, fine chemicals, pharmaceuticals and many other products.<br> The book takes the readers from the fundamentals of engineering methods, transport processes, and fluid dynamics to device conception, simulation and modelling, control interfaces and issues of modularity and compatibility. Fabrication strategies and techniques are examined next, focused on the fabrication of suitable microcomponents from various materials such as metals, polymers, silicon, ceramics and glass. The book concludes with actual applications and operational aspects of micro process systems, giving broad coverage to industrial efforts in America, Europe and Asia as well as laboratory equipment and education.
Advanced Micro & Nanosystems (AMN) provides cutting-edge reviews and detailed case studies by top authors from science and industry, covering technologies, devices and advanced systems from the micro and nano worlds, which together have an immense innovative application potential that opens up with control of shape and function from the atomic level right up to the visible world without any technological gaps.
In this topical volume, authors from leading industrial players and research institutions present a concise and didactical introduction to Micro Process Engineering, the combination of microtechnology and process engineering into a most promising and powerful tool for revolutionizing chemical processes and industrial mass production of bulk materials, fine chemicals, pharmaceuticals and many other products.
The book takes the readers from the fundamentals of engineering methods, transport processes, and fluid dynamics to device conception, simulation and modelling, control interfaces and issues of modularity and compatibility. Fabrication strategies and techniques are examined next, focused on the fabrication of suitable microcomponents from various materials such as metals, polymers, silicon, ceramics and glass. The book concludes with actual applications and operational aspects of micro process systems, giving broad coverage to industrial efforts in America, Europe and Asia as well as laboratory equipment and education.
Norbert Kockmann, Laboratory for Design of Microsystems, Department of Microsystem Engineering (IMTEK), University of Freiburg, Germany
Abstract
The fundamentals of chemical engineering are presented with the aim of applications in microsystem technology, microfluidics, and transport processes in microstructures. After a general overview about both disciplines and common areas the concept of unit operations is briefly introduced. The balance equations are derived from statistical mechanics and applied to other relevant systems of process engineering together with the kinetic description of main transfer processes. Engineering tools like dimensional analysis, order of magnitude estimations, or lumped element modeling are explained, which are very helpful for dealing with complex nonlinear systems. Concluding this chapter, the benefits and limits of miniaturization of various unit operations and typical issues are explained that might serve as a plentiful source for the future development.
Keywords
Unit operations, balance equations, transport equations, engineering modeling, scaling process
1.1 Introduction 2 1.2 Unit Operations and Beyond 5 1.3 Balances and Transport Equations 9 1.3.1 Statistical Mechanics and Boltzmann Equation 10 1.3.2 Macroscopic Balance Equations 13 1.3.3 The Mass Balance 14 1.3.4 The Species Equation 14 1.3.5 The Momentum Equation and Force Balance 15 1.3.6 The Energy Balance 16 1.3.7 The Entropy Equation and the Efficiency of a System 18 1.3.8 Elementary Transport Processes and their Description 19 1.3.9 Additional Remarks to Balance Equations 21 1.4 Calculation Methods and Simulation 21 1.4.1 Physical Variables and Dimensional Analysis 22 1.4.2 Similarity Laws and Scaling Laws 24 1.4.3 Order of Magnitude 24 1.4.4 Lumped Element Modeling 25 1.4.5 Numerical Simulation and Analytical Modeling 26 1.5 Miniaturization and its Application to Transport Processes 27 1.5.1 Length 27 1.5.2 Area 32 1.5.3 Volume 38 1.5.4 Other Topics 41 1.6 Conclusions and Outlook 42 References 42
1.1 Introduction
Process technology and microsystem technology are both interdisciplinary engineering and natural science branches connecting physics, chemistry, biology, engineering arts, and management techniques to an enabling toolbox for various applications. Process engineering embraces orientating calculations for process and equipment design under general orientation, and system-orientated, cross-linked thinking. Process engineers are working in various areas ranging from the food industry through biotechnology to pharmaceutical products, from analytical and laboratory equipment through energy conversion to industrial chemistry for the production of millions of tons of chemicals [1, Chapter 1]. Chemical process engineering covers not only the design and implementation of chemical production and analytical processes but also deals with the equipment design, the appropriate materials, the fabrication, and operation of various chemical production processes. The aims of process technology are the economical and safe production of the desired products with the intended form and composition.
Microsystem technology, coming from information technology and miniaturization of data-processing devices, has now entered many fields in our daily life. Silicon chips and sensors can be found in cars, washing machines or smart cards with various functions. Besides the data-processing function, microsystems have taken over other tasks like sensing and analyzing, actuating or controlling larger systems. Microsystem engineering comprises besides engineering skills like design, simulation, or material knowledge also a deep physical and chemical knowledge for the fabrication and functional design issues. Also medical and biological skills are useful for the growing application fields for analysis, diagnostics, and therapeutics. A good overview about the state-of-the-art in microsystem technology is given in. For the control and manipulation of still smaller systems, microsystem technology is a major link to nanotechnology.
Figure 1.1 gives an impression of the wide field and complexity of both disciplines, but also illustrates the multiple interfaces and common fields. The fruitful ideas from both sides may inspire the further development in both disciplines and result in an enlargement of possibilities and applications for the innovation across the borderlines.
Chemistry in miniaturized equipment is an emerging discipline coming together from microsystem technology and from chemical engineering, but also an established discipline of chemical analytics. Starting at the end of the nineteenth century a group of researchers at the University of Delft around Behrens and at the Technical University of Graz around Prof. Emich and Prof. Pregl developed the chemical analysis of very small amounts of reagents. In 1900 Prof. Behrens wrote his book "Mikrochemische Technik" about micro chemical techniques. In 1911 Prof. Friedrich Emich published the textbook "Lehrbuch der Mikrochemie" and Prof. Fritz Pregl was rewarded in 1923 by the Nobel price for his fundamental work in microchemical analysis. In the middle of the last century in nuclear science small structures were developed for the separation of isotopes, see. From this work, among others, the LIGA technology emerges at German research institutes.
Dealing with very small geometrical structures is also a well-known area in process engineering. The adsorption technology and chemical reactions at catalytic surfaces are based on the flow and adhesion processes in nanoscale pores [7, Chapter 4]. Transformations and transfer processes on the molecular scale are called "micro processes" in contrast to a "macro process" where convection plays the major role. Some typical length scales for process technology, chemistry and microtechnology are given in Fig. 1.2.
Figure 1.2 illustrates the different wording in process engineering, microsystem technology, and nanotechnology, especially the different meaning of "micro". The micropores in adsorption media are one characteristic example on the nanometer scale. Microstructured equipment has internal characteristic dimensions like channel diameter or gap height within the micrometer range. A clear definition of "micro" does not exist, but it is not necessarily required for all applications and areas.
In the process industry, there are several applications of structures with typical dimensions below 1 mm, like compact plate and fin heat exchangers or structured packings in separation columns for enhanced heat and mass transfer. This is often summarized under the key word of process intensification. However, the miniaturization of conventional technology is limited by two major restrictions: the fabrication possibilities for the small structures at reasonable costs and the increased fouling probability, the high danger of blocking, and total failure of these structures. The first restriction has been widened with the enhanced fabrication possibilities, but the risk of fouling and blocking is still there and should not be underestimated.
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