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Evolution of Chemical Industries and Process Intensification

The evolution of chemical processes and process equipment is closely related to the methods and apparatus used in the chemistry laboratory. At the early stage of evolution of chemical industries, process steps in the manufacture of a chemical mimicked the steps used in the chemistry lab in its preparation. Most of these processes were batch processes. Some of these evolved into continuous processes as the production volumes increased. Batch processes occupy the preeminent position, even today, in the pharmaceutical and fine-chemical industries. Some of the process equipment - stirred vessels, packed towers, filters, and so on - are the up-sealed versions of the apparatus used in the chemistry laboratory of yesteryear. Process intensification (PI), which represents a paradigm shift in equipment as well as in process design, takes advantage of advances in reaction engineering and transport phenomena in the design of equipment and processes (as opposed to the mere scale-up of the apparatus of the chemistry lab and mimicking the step in the laboratory preparation). [Pg.130]

PI aims at the design of equipment and devising of processes that could bring about a dramatic reduction in equipment size or footprint. The reduction could be in the range from 10 to 100 times. Such a reduction would lead to inherently safer design and a reduction in capital and operating costs. [Pg.130]


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