The use of solar light to promote chemical reactions holds significant potential with regard to sustainable energy solutions. While the number of visible light-induced transformations has increased significantly, the use of abundant solar light has been extremely limited. We report a leaf-inspired photomicroreactor that constitutes a merger between luminescent solar concentrators (LSCs) and flow photochemistry to enable green and efficient reactions powered by solar irradiation. This device based on fluorescent dye-doped polydimethylsiloxane collects sunlight, focuses the energy to a narrow wavelength region, and then transports that energy to embedded microchannels where the flowing reactants are converted.
The
use of solar energy to power chemical reactions is a long-standing
dream of the chemical community. Recently, visible-light-mediated
photoredox catalysis has been recognized as the ideal catalytic transformation
to convert solar energy into chemical bonds. However, scaling photochemical
transformations has been extremely challenging due to Bouguer–Lambert–Beer
law. Recently, we have pioneered the development of luminescent solar
concentrator photomicroreactors (LSC-PMs), which display an excellent
energy efficiency. These devices harvest solar energy, convert the
broad solar energy spectrum to a narrow-wavelength region, and subsequently
waveguide the re-emitted photons to the reaction channels. Herein,
we report on the scalability of such LSC-PMs via a numbering-up strategy.
Paramount in our work was the use of molds that were fabricated via
3D printing. This allowed us to rapidly produce many different prototypes
and to optimize experimentally key design aspects in a time-efficient
fashion. Reactors up to 32 parallel channels have been fabricated
that display an excellent flow distribution using a bifurcated flow
distributor (standard deviations below 10%). This excellent flow distribution
was crucial to scale up a model reaction efficiently, displaying yields
comparable to those obtained in a single-channel device. We also found
that interchannel spacing is an important and unique design parameter
for numbered-up LSC-PMs, which influences greatly the photon flux
experienced within the reaction channels.
Owing to the complexity of spinal surgery, there is a great prevalence of dural tear causing cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leakage. Many studies focused on suture repair for dural tear to stop CSF leak. Now some new treatment strategies have shown a promising effect that is listed as follows: 1) creating watertight dural closure to stop CSF leak with the help of dural substitute material; and 2) retarding CSF leak by changing pressure difference, including reducing the subarachnoid fluid pressure, increasing the epidural space pressure and both. In fact several methods mentioned above are usually combined to treat CSF leak. However, no update review summarized the relevant studies implemented in recent years. In this review, the authors would compare the effects of different dural closure techniques, and introduce the latest treatment methods and mechanisms.
A simple and inexpensive reaction control system mitigates the impact of solar irradiance fluctuations on the conversion of a sunlight-powered photochemical reaction, affording constant product quality.
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