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      Microsensor Electrodes for 3D Inline Process Monitoring in Multiphase Microreactors

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          Abstract

          We present an electrochemical microsensor for the monitoring of hydrogen peroxide direct synthesis in a membrane microreactor environment by measuring the hydrogen peroxide and oxygen concentrations. In prior work, for the first time, we performed in situ measurements with electrochemical microsensors in a microreactor setup. However, the sensors used were only able to measure at the bottom of the microchannel. Therefore, only a limited assessment of the gas distribution and concentration change over the reaction channel dimensions was possible because the dissolved gases entered the reactor through a membrane at the top of the channel. In this work, we developed a new fabrication process to allow the sensor wires, with electrodes at the tip, to protrude from the sensor housing into the reactor channel. This enables measurements not only at the channel bottom, but also along the vertical axis within the channel, between the channel wall and membrane. The new sensor design was integrated into a multiphase microreactor and calibrated for oxygen and hydrogen peroxide measurements. The importance of measurements in three dimensions was demonstrated by the detection of strongly increased gas concentrations towards the membrane, in contrast to measurements at the channel bottom. These findings allow a better understanding of the analyte distribution and diffusion processes in the microreactor channel as the basis for process control of the synthesis reaction.

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          Hydrogen Peroxide Synthesis: An Outlook beyond the Anthraquinone Process

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            Direct synthesis of hydrogen peroxide from hydrogen and oxygen: An overview of recent developments in the process

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              Hydrogen Peroxide: A Key Chemical for Today's Sustainable Development.

              The global utilization of hydrogen peroxide, a green oxidant that decomposes in water and oxygen, has gone from 0.5 million tonnes per year three decades ago to 4.5 million tonnes per year in 2014, and is still climbing. With the aim of expanding the utilization of this eminent green chemical across different industrial and civil sectors, the production and use of hydrogen peroxide as a green industrial oxidant is reviewed herein to provide an overview of the explosive growth of its industrial use over the last three decades and of the state of the art in its industrial manufacture, with important details of what determines the viability of the direct production from oxygen and hydrogen compared with the traditional auto-oxidation process.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Sensors (Basel)
                Sensors (Basel)
                sensors
                Sensors (Basel, Switzerland)
                MDPI
                1424-8220
                28 August 2020
                September 2020
                : 20
                : 17
                : 4876
                Affiliations
                Laboratory for Sensors, IMTEK Department of Microsystems Engineering, University of Freiburg, 79106 Freiburg, Germany; sebastian.urban@ 123456imtek.uni-freiburg.de (S.U.); vinayaganataraj.sundaram@ 123456venus.uni-freiburg.de (V.T.S.); kieninger@ 123456imtek.uni-freiburg.de (J.K.); urban@ 123456imtek.de (G.A.U.)
                Author notes
                [* ]Correspondence: weltin@ 123456imtek.de ; Tel.: +49-761-203-7263
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0107-4242
                https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8220-8814
                https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8288-8266
                Article
                sensors-20-04876
                10.3390/s20174876
                7506731
                da38f88c-ceb1-4f5b-a236-9b1ecd13648a
                © 2020 by the authors.

                Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 04 August 2020
                : 26 August 2020
                Categories
                Communication

                Biomedical engineering
                process monitoring,electrochemical sensors,oxygen,hydrogen peroxide,chronoamperometry,microreactor

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