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3D printing in chemical engineering and catalytic technology: structured catalysts, mixers and reactors
Author(s) -
Cesar ParraCabrera,
Clement Achille,
Simon Kuhn,
Rob Ameloot
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
chemical society reviews
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 15.598
H-Index - 513
eISSN - 1460-4744
pISSN - 0306-0012
DOI - 10.1039/c7cs00631d
Subject(s) - fabrication , 3d printing , field (mathematics) , computer science , nanotechnology , process engineering , digital manufacturing , mechanical engineering , manufacturing engineering , systems engineering , materials science , engineering , medicine , alternative medicine , mathematics , pathology , pure mathematics
Computer-aided fabrication technologies combined with simulation and data processing approaches are changing our way of manufacturing and designing functional objects. Also in the field of catalytic technology and chemical engineering the impact of additive manufacturing, also referred to as 3D printing, is steadily increasing thanks to a rapidly decreasing equipment threshold. Although still in an early stage, the rapid and seamless transition between digital data and physical objects enabled by these fabrication tools will benefit both research and manufacture of reactors and structured catalysts. Additive manufacturing closes the gap between theory and experiment, by enabling accurate fabrication of geometries optimized through computational fluid dynamics and the experimental evaluation of their properties. This review highlights the research using 3D printing and computational modeling as digital tools for the design and fabrication of reactors and structured catalysts. The goal of this contribution is to stimulate interactions at the crossroads of chemistry and materials science on the one hand and digital fabrication and computational modeling on the other.

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