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Brigitta Dúzs1, István Szalai1

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Artificial chemical systems require nonequilibrium conditions for control. Researchers used a hydrogel reactor with separated reactants to achieve spatial control and observe localized wave phenomena in chemical reactions.

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Area of Science:

  • Chemical Engineering
  • Materials Science
  • Physical Chemistry

Background:

  • Operating chemical systems, both natural and artificial, necessitates nonequilibrium conditions for temporal and spatial process control.
  • Open reaction-diffusion systems offer a versatile approach to establishing these nonequilibrium conditions.
  • Designing effective reactors is crucial for maintaining these nonequilibrium states in chemical processes.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the use of a hydrogel with flow-through channels as a simple reactor for creating and controlling nonequilibrium chemical conditions.
  • To demonstrate spatial separation of reaction intermediates using a bipolar antagonistic diffusion field generated by localized, separated reactants.
  • To explore the emergence of localized wave phenomena in nonlinear reaction-diffusion systems under controlled spatial separation.

Main Methods:

  • Fabrication of a hydrogel-based reactor featuring flow-through channels for reactant delivery.
  • Implementation of two separated reactants to establish a bipolar antagonistic diffusion field.
  • Utilization of numerical simulations to model the diffusion and reaction dynamics.
  • Conducting experimental studies to validate simulation results and observe chemical separation and wave phenomena.

Main Results:

  • The hydrogel reactor successfully created a controlled inhomogeneous diffusion field from localized, separated reactants.
  • Effective spatial separation of reaction intermediates was achieved due to the bipolar diffusion field.
  • Localized wave phenomena were observed in a nonlinear activatory-inhibitory reaction system, induced by the spatial control.
  • Numerical simulations and experimental results showed good agreement, validating the proposed mechanism.

Conclusions:

  • A hydrogel reactor with flow-through channels provides a practical method for establishing controlled nonequilibrium conditions in chemical systems.
  • Bipolar antagonistic diffusion fields effectively induce spatial separation of chemical species and reaction intermediates.
  • This spatial control enables the observation of unique phenomena, such as localized waves in nonlinear reactions.
  • The findings offer a pathway for designing advanced artificial nonequilibrium systems with precise chemical spatial organization.