A coupled experimental/numerical approach for fluids mixing study under supercritical antisolvent process conditions in microreactors
ERRIGUIBLE, Arnaud
Institut de Mécanique et d'Ingénierie [I2M]
Institut de Chimie de la Matière Condensée de Bordeaux [ICMCB]
Institut de Mécanique et d'Ingénierie [I2M]
Institut de Chimie de la Matière Condensée de Bordeaux [ICMCB]
ERRIGUIBLE, Arnaud
Institut de Mécanique et d'Ingénierie [I2M]
Institut de Chimie de la Matière Condensée de Bordeaux [ICMCB]
< Réduire
Institut de Mécanique et d'Ingénierie [I2M]
Institut de Chimie de la Matière Condensée de Bordeaux [ICMCB]
Langue
en
Communication dans un congrès avec actes
Ce document a été publié dans
17th European Meeting on Supercritical Fluids and 7th European Meeting High Pressure Technology, ITQUIMA, April 8-11, 2019 : proceedings, 17th European Meeting on Supercritical Fluids and 7th European Meeting High Pressure Technology, 2019-04-08, Ciudad Real. p. 23-24
ITQUIMA
Résumé en anglais
Supercritical antisolvent techniques have demonstrated promises for processing organic materials at the nanoscale. However, their industrial development is still limited by the poor understanding of the inherent coupled ...Lire la suite >
Supercritical antisolvent techniques have demonstrated promises for processing organic materials at the nanoscale. However, their industrial development is still limited by the poor understanding of the inherent coupled physico-chemical mechanisms (thermodynamics, hydrodynamics, and nucleation-growth). Previous work has demonstrated that it was possible to implement Supercrical AntiSolvent prcoesses in microfluidicsdevices (μSAS), but without deeper investigations into the physico-chemical phenomena [1]. Indeed, micromixing could have a significant effect over particles size and size distribution since homogeneous concentration distribution and high degree of supersaturation can only be reached by intense micromixing obtained through various strategies of mixing geometries. Therefore, we have investigated coflowing fluids at high pressure in a microchip to address the classical limitations and to well control the process conditions. By comparing the experimental observations to the numerical simulation, fluid flow behaviour has been studied for microfluidic mixing and the process condition effects have been captured.< Réduire
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