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Berkeley
Scientists Bring MRI/NMR to Microreactors
Monday, January 28, 2008
The
top image shows an MRI signal from thermally polarized
propylene, and the bottom image shows the signal obtained
with parahydrogen- polarized propylene. The signal-to-noise
ratio (SNR) of the bottom image is a factor of 300 larger
than that of the thermally polarized propylene in the top
image.
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Credit:
Berkeley Laboratory
In a significant step
towards improving the design of future catalysts and catalytic
reactors, especially for microfluidic “lab-on-a-chip”
devices, researchers with the U.S. Department of Energy’s
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) and the
University of California (UC) at Berkeley, have successfully
applied magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to the study of
gas-phase reactions on the microscale.
Under the leadership of
Alexander Pines, faculty senior scientist in Berkeley Lab’s
Materials Sciences Division and the Glenn T. Seaborg Professor of
Chemistry at UC Berkeley, a team of researchers that included
chemists Louis Bouchard and Scott Burt have developed a technique
in which parahydrogen-polarized gas is used to make an MRI signal
strong enough to provide direct visualization of the gas-phase
flow of active catalysts in packed-bed microreactors. This work,
the first application of gas-phase MRI to microfluidic catalysis,
shows that parahydrogen-enhanced MRI can be used to track gases
and liquids in microfluidic devices as well as in the void spaces
of a tightly packed catalyst reactor bed.
“This is the first time
hyperpolarized gas has been used to directly study catalytic
reaction products on such a small scale and without the use of
tracer particles or gas,” says Bouchard. “It opens
the door for future studies of heterogeneous catalysis in which
all the unique benefits of MRI, such as velocimetry and spatially
dependent quantities, are available.”
Adds Burt, “Furthermore,
our results indicate that our approach to using parahydrogen can
be extended to other chemical reactions beyond hydrogenation,
which significantly broadens the impact and potential use of our
technique.”
Pines, Bouchard and Burt are
the co-authors of a paper published in the January 25, 2008
edition of the journal Science,
describing this research. The paper is entitled: “NMR
Imaging of Catalytic Hydrogenation in Microreactors with the Use
of para-Hydrogen.” Other co-authors of this paper were
Sabieh Anwar, who is a former member of Pines’ research
group now at Lahore University, Pakistan, and Kirill Kovtunov and
Igor Koptyug, from the International Tomography Center,
Novosibirsk, Russia, who are experts in catalysis and the use of
MRI to study catalytic processes.
Commenting on the Science
paper, Jeffrey Reimer, who chairs the UC Berkeley Chemical
Engineering Department, said, “The spatial and temporal
distribution of reactants and products in heterogeneous systems
has not been visited by researchers in recent years owing to the
lack of quantitative measures in situ. So while the
sophistication of mathematical modeling of such systems proceeds
at the rate at which computational power increases, the relevance
of such models is dubious since they cannot be compared with
measurements other than bulk properties of temperature,
conversion, etc. The methods and data presented in this paper
portend a new era of measurement, modeling, and design for more
efficient reactors.”
Since nearly all manufacturing
processes that involve chemistry start with a catalytic reaction,
there is a premium on the design of new and better catalysts and
catalytic reactors. This is especially true for the growing field
of microfluidic chip technology. MRI and nuclear magnetic
resonance (NMR), its sister technology, are among the most
powerful analytic tools known to science and could be immensely
valuable for characterizing catalytic reactors and reactions in
microfluidic devices. However, the low sensitivity of
conventional MRI/NMR techniques has limited their applicability
to microscale catalysis research.
For the results reported in
their Science paper,
Pines, Bouchard and Burt were able to overcome the inherent low
sensitivity of MRI/NMR through the use of parahydrogen.
MRI/NMR signals are made
possible by a property found in the atomic nuclei of almost all
molecules called “spin,” which gives rise to a
magnetic moment, meaning the nuclei act as if they were bar
magnets with a north and south pole. Obtaining an MRI/NMR signal
depends upon an excess of nuclei in a sample with spins pointing
in one direction or the other.
At standard temperature and
pressure, hydrogen gas exists in one of two molecular forms –
ortho and para – with the former making up about 75-percent
of the mixture. Both molecular forms are diatomic, but in
orthohydrogen, the spins of the two protons in the nuclei are
pointed in the same direction, whereas in parahydrogen, the spins
of the two protons point in opposite directions. By increasing
the fraction of parahydrogen in the gas mixture there is a net
excess in the para spin state even at room temperature and in the
complete absence of a magnetic field. Under the right conditions,
this hyperpolarization can be passed on to other nuclei and used
to substantially boost the strength of their MRI/NMR signals by
several orders of magnitude.
Pines, Bouchard and Burt have
found a way to use parahydrogen enhanced gas in combination with
propylene gas and a heterogenized catalyst to achieve a strong
MRI/NMR signal from samples in the gas-phase, something that has
only been done before using hyperpolarized noble gases and
expensive polarization equipment. A mixture of propylene and
parahydrogen enriched gas (about 40-percent parahydrogen) is
flowed through a reactor cell containing a catalyst (Wilkinson’s
catalyst) that’s been immobilized on a modified silica gel.
As the parahydrogen enhanced gas mixture passes over the
catalyst, hydrogenation takes place. This produces spin polarized
propane gas that is transferred to an MRI/NMR magnet. The
catalyst-free hyperpolarized propane gas can then be used to
enhance MRI/NMR signals.
“The enhanced MRI/NMR
sensitivity provided by parahydrogen induced polarization allows
us to overcome the inherent problem of low sensitivity in
thermally polarized gas-phase MRI/NMR,” says Bouchard.
“This is the reason we are able to get such high-spatial
resolution MRI images in the gas phase. Using conventional
thermally-polarized MRI/NMR signals, this would be an impossible
task.”
It has been a persistent
challenge for scientists and engineers who study catalysts to
correlate active catalytic regions with overall morphology in
heterogeneous catalyst beds. It has also been a challenge to
monitor the multistep reactions that take place within the beds.
This has hampered the design of catalytic reactors that give
optimal performances.
Says Burt, “Our MRI/NMR
technique provides the ability to directly measure the spatial
dependence of conversion and allows one to do a reality check on
any simulations or assumptions used to design a catalytic
reactor. Design can therefore become an iterative process that
converges on an optimal performance.”
The costs of researching and
developing new catalysts can be very expensive, and the
parahydrogen-enhanced MRI/NMR technique developed by Pines,
Bouchard, Burt and their collaborators has the potential to
significantly reduce these costs, as well as substantially speed
up the process.
Not only does it allow future
studies of potential catalysts to be carried out on a smaller and
more economical scale, it is also well-suited for “green
chemistry,” the new approach that seeks to maximize
productivity and yield while minimizing costs, amounts of
reactants and waste products.
Pines, Bouchard and Burt say
their technique is ready to be used in the study of hydrogenation
reactions now. In the future, they would like to extend its
applications beyond hydrogenation to study other types of
catalysts and chemical reactions.
Says Bouchard, “We also
have new ideas on how to get high-resolution temperature and
pressure maps of the catalyst bed that will convey information
about the energetics of the chemical reaction and mechanics of
fluid transport during the reaction.
Says Burt, “This would be
very exciting as there are few existing techniques that provide
such information apart from simulations. And for microreactors,
there is simply no competing method for studying such gas-phase
reactions at this level of detail and spatial resolution.”
This work was supported by the
Director, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences,
Materials Sciences and Engineering Division of the U.S.
Department of Energy.
Berkeley Lab is a U.S.
Department of Energy national laboratory located in Berkeley,
California. It conducts unclassified scientific research and is
managed by the University of California.
Source:
Berkeley Laboratory

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