Applying a unified process kinetic equation to advanced materials process analysis: Characterization of the kinetics of isothermal microwave‐assisted chemical syntheses

Abstract Rate‐enhancement of any isothermal, isobaric chemical synthesis conducted under resonant microwave (RM) irradiation versus the same process activated by conventional field‐free heating has been attributed to a reduction in activation enthalpy of the process. This report applies a unified pr...

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Main Author: Boon Wong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2023-03-01
Series:Engineering Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/eng2.12544
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author Boon Wong
author_facet Boon Wong
author_sort Boon Wong
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Rate‐enhancement of any isothermal, isobaric chemical synthesis conducted under resonant microwave (RM) irradiation versus the same process activated by conventional field‐free heating has been attributed to a reduction in activation enthalpy of the process. This report applies a unified process kinetic equation (UPKE) to demonstrate and characterize non‐thermal microwave effects (NTME) on kinetics‐enhancements observed in isothermal microwave‐assisted chemical syntheses (IMACS). The UPKE, derived from a mesoscopic irreversible thermodynamic model, pinpoints that the rate of any high‐affinity chemical reaction is effectively independent of the affinity of the process as described by the mass‐action rate law. Energetically, activation enthalpy reduction observed in IMACS is considered the major NTME, which causes dominant process‐rate enhancements. This NTME results from RM‐induced enthalpy variation during the reaction: RM energy‐input first promotes the molar enthalpy of the irradiated reactant(s) at temperature, which consequently motivates an activation enthalpy reduction for rate‐enhancement. Conversely, frequency coefficient lowering is another common NTME occurring in IMACS, causing an adverse yet compensable setback to process‐kinetics as predicted by the UPKE. Applicability of the UPKE‐proposed rationale and methodology for IMACS kinetic characterization is fully confirmed by relevant data in the literature.
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spelling doaj.art-00bd76bbaf6a4702bebf7e09ad788b4a2023-03-14T14:26:23ZengWileyEngineering Reports2577-81962023-03-0153n/an/a10.1002/eng2.12544Applying a unified process kinetic equation to advanced materials process analysis: Characterization of the kinetics of isothermal microwave‐assisted chemical synthesesBoon Wong0Materials Scientist (Retired) California USAAbstract Rate‐enhancement of any isothermal, isobaric chemical synthesis conducted under resonant microwave (RM) irradiation versus the same process activated by conventional field‐free heating has been attributed to a reduction in activation enthalpy of the process. This report applies a unified process kinetic equation (UPKE) to demonstrate and characterize non‐thermal microwave effects (NTME) on kinetics‐enhancements observed in isothermal microwave‐assisted chemical syntheses (IMACS). The UPKE, derived from a mesoscopic irreversible thermodynamic model, pinpoints that the rate of any high‐affinity chemical reaction is effectively independent of the affinity of the process as described by the mass‐action rate law. Energetically, activation enthalpy reduction observed in IMACS is considered the major NTME, which causes dominant process‐rate enhancements. This NTME results from RM‐induced enthalpy variation during the reaction: RM energy‐input first promotes the molar enthalpy of the irradiated reactant(s) at temperature, which consequently motivates an activation enthalpy reduction for rate‐enhancement. Conversely, frequency coefficient lowering is another common NTME occurring in IMACS, causing an adverse yet compensable setback to process‐kinetics as predicted by the UPKE. Applicability of the UPKE‐proposed rationale and methodology for IMACS kinetic characterization is fully confirmed by relevant data in the literature.https://doi.org/10.1002/eng2.12544activation enthalpy reductionisothermal microwave‐assisted chemical syntheseskinetics‐/rate‐enhancementsmesoscopic irreversible thermodynamicsnon‐thermal microwave effectsresonant microwave irradiation/field
spellingShingle Boon Wong
Applying a unified process kinetic equation to advanced materials process analysis: Characterization of the kinetics of isothermal microwave‐assisted chemical syntheses
Engineering Reports
activation enthalpy reduction
isothermal microwave‐assisted chemical syntheses
kinetics‐/rate‐enhancements
mesoscopic irreversible thermodynamics
non‐thermal microwave effects
resonant microwave irradiation/field
title Applying a unified process kinetic equation to advanced materials process analysis: Characterization of the kinetics of isothermal microwave‐assisted chemical syntheses
title_full Applying a unified process kinetic equation to advanced materials process analysis: Characterization of the kinetics of isothermal microwave‐assisted chemical syntheses
title_fullStr Applying a unified process kinetic equation to advanced materials process analysis: Characterization of the kinetics of isothermal microwave‐assisted chemical syntheses
title_full_unstemmed Applying a unified process kinetic equation to advanced materials process analysis: Characterization of the kinetics of isothermal microwave‐assisted chemical syntheses
title_short Applying a unified process kinetic equation to advanced materials process analysis: Characterization of the kinetics of isothermal microwave‐assisted chemical syntheses
title_sort applying a unified process kinetic equation to advanced materials process analysis characterization of the kinetics of isothermal microwave assisted chemical syntheses
topic activation enthalpy reduction
isothermal microwave‐assisted chemical syntheses
kinetics‐/rate‐enhancements
mesoscopic irreversible thermodynamics
non‐thermal microwave effects
resonant microwave irradiation/field
url https://doi.org/10.1002/eng2.12544
work_keys_str_mv AT boonwong applyingaunifiedprocesskineticequationtoadvancedmaterialsprocessanalysischaracterizationofthekineticsofisothermalmicrowaveassistedchemicalsyntheses