Imagine making some liquids mix that do not mix, then unmixing them.
In one of the grand challenges of science, a Flinders University device which previously is now unravelling the mystery of incompatible fluids; a development that could enhance many future products, industrial processes and even the food we eat.
Using the highly advanced rapid processing techniques possible in the Flinders vortex fluidic device (VFD), the Australian research team has capped off 10 years of research to find a way to use clean chemistry to , or finding a new way to make oil and water attract.
This will have applications in a range of global industries – from food processing and nutraceuticals to cosmetics and drug delivery (think more pure and effective fish oil capsules), says Flinders University Professor Colin Raston, senior author in a new paper, published today in Chemical Science.
“Mixing immiscible liquids is fundamentally important in process engineering and usually involves a lot of energy input and waste products,” says Professor Raston, 2020 SA Scientist of the Year.
“We now demonstrate how this process, using a common solvent and water, can avoid the use of other substance for controlling reactions across immiscible liquids, making it cleaner and greener” says the Professor in Clean Technology.
“Using thin-film microfluidics in combination with high shear flow chemistry and high heat and mass transfer, the rapidly evolving VFD technology is overcoming the mixing limitations of traditional batch processing,” says co-author Matt Jellicoe, also from the Flinders Institute for Nanoscale Science and Technology.
“We conducted over 100,000 experiments to establish how liquids mix and what their flow behaviours are at very small nano-meter dimensions,” adds co-author Aghil Igder, also from the Flinders Institute for Nanoscale Science and Technology.
As well, the Flinders University team has also (published in American Chemical Society’s Sustainable Chemistry and Engineering 2021 DOI: 10.1021/acssuschemeng.1c05534) on experimental biodegradable polymers to start making its organic substances and clean technologies available at scale to suit a range of industries.
The VFD has been used in multiple experiments to produce such as peptides, and and many other which can now be replicated in a scaled-up version of the device which has been developed.
‘ (2022) by Matt Jellicoe, Aghil Igder, Clarence Chuah, Darryl B Jones, Xuan Luo, Keith A Stubbs, Emily M Crawley, Scott J Pye, Nikita Joseph, Kasturi Vimalananthan, Zoe Gardner, David P Harvey, Xianjue Chen, Filomena Salvemini, Shan He, Wei Zhang, Justin M Chalker, Jamie S Quinton, Youhong Tang and Colin L Raston has been published in Chemical Science (The Royal Society of Chemistry) DOI: 10.1039/D1SC05829K