微波技术能够实现节能的化学反应。
Microwave technique allows energy-efficient chemical reactions

原始链接: https://phys.org/news/2025-10-microwave-technique-energy-efficient-chemical.html

东京大学的研究人员开发了一种更高效的工业化学过程加热方法,利用微波直接将能量输送到反应发生的“活性位点”。当前方法通过加热整个反应器来浪费能量,而这项新技术则只将能量集中在需要它的原子和分子上——初步测试表明其效率提高了4.5倍。 该系统采用经过调谐的微波来激发特定元素(沸石“海绵”内的铟离子),频率低于标准微波炉。这种集中的加热能够使水分解和甲烷转化等反应——这对燃料生产和碳捕获至关重要——在较低的整体温度下发生。 尽管该技术仍处于实验室阶段,但它在二氧化碳回收和更轻松的塑料回收方面显示出前景。扩大复杂材料生产规模和实现精确温度测量仍然存在挑战,但该团队计划在十年内进行试点示范,并积极寻求行业合作伙伴以进一步开发。

一篇最近发表在phys.org上的文章详细介绍了一种微波技术,可以实现更节能的化学反应,并在Hacker News上引发了讨论。研究人员正在利用聚焦微波能量进行“生态催化”,这个概念可以追溯到20世纪80年代,但现在正重新受到关注。 除了传统的化学之外,用户还在尝试使用微波进行工业过程,例如金属铸造——具体来说,是使用碳化硅坩埚(甚至在微波中*制作*它们)来熔化青铜和铝等金属,与传统方法相比,可能显著减少气体使用量。 该讨论强调了能源密集型行业可能发生的变化,评论者指出,尽管这项技术具有显而易见的优势,但其采用却出人意料地晚。Y Combinator 2026年冬季申请期也在该讨论中宣布。
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原文

Some industrial processes used to create useful chemicals require heat, but heating methods are often inefficient, partly because they heat a greater volume of space than they really need to. Researchers, including those from the University of Tokyo, devised a way to limit heating to the specific areas required in such situations. Their technique uses microwaves, not unlike those used in home microwave ovens, to excite specific elements dispersed in the materials to be heated. Their system proved to be around 4.5 times more efficient than current methods.

While there's more to climate change than and (CO2), reducing the need for the former and the output of the latter are critical matters that science and engineering strive to tackle. Under the broad banner of green transformation, Lecturer Fuminao Kishimoto from the Department of Chemical System Engineering at the University of Tokyo and his team explore ways to improve things like . Their latest development could impact on some industries involved in and may have some other positive offshoots. And their underlying idea is relatively straightforward.

"In most cases, occur only at very small, localized regions involving just a few atoms or molecules. This means that even within a large chemical reactor, only limited parts truly require energy input for the reaction," said Kishimoto.

"However, conventional heating methods, such as combustion or hot fluids, disperse thermal energy throughout the entire reactor. We started this research with the idea that microwaves could concentrate energy on a single atomic active site, a little like how a oven heats food."

As Kishimoto mentions, the process is similar in concept to how a microwave oven works, only in this case, rather than having microwaves tuned to heat polar water molecules at around 2.45 gigahertz (which is also a common Wi-Fi frequency in case you've ever noticed that your internet connection becomes unstable when you're heating leftovers), their microwaves are tuned to much lower frequencies around 900 megahertz. This is because those are ideal to excite the material they wished to heat up, zeolite.

"The most challenging aspect was proving that only a single atomic active site was being heated by the microwaves. To achieve this, we spent four years developing a specialized experimental environment at Japan's world-class large synchrotron radiation facility, SPring-8," said Kishimoto.

"This involved using spongelike zeolite, which is ideal because we can control the sizes of the sponge cavities, allowing us to balance different factors of the reactions. Inside the sponge cavities, indium ions act like antennas. These are excited by the microwaves which creates heat, which can then be transferred to reaction materials passing through the sponge."

By selectively delivering heat to specific materials, lower overall temperatures can be used to achieve reactions which are otherwise very demanding, such as water decomposition or methane conversion, both useful to create fuel products. They can further improve selectivity by varying the pore size of the zeolite sponge, with smaller pores yielding greater efficiency and larger pores enabling greater control over reactions.

And one key advantage is that this technique can even be used in carbon capture, recycling CO2 as part of the methane conversion, and even recycle plastics more easily.

The challenge now will be how to scale this up to encourage industrial adoption—things that work in the lab don't directly translate into large industrial settings easily. And there are some limitations to the research that would also need to be addressed first. The material requirements are quite complex and aren't simple or cheap to produce; it's hard to precisely measure temperatures at the , so current data rely on indirect evidence and more direct means would be preferred. And, despite the improvements in efficiency, there is still room for improvement here too, as there are heat and electrical losses along the way.

"We aim to expand this concept to other important chemical reactions beyond CO2 conversion and to further optimize catalyst design to improve durability and scalability. The technology is still at the laboratory stage. Scaling up will require further development of catalysts, reactor design and integration with renewable power sources," said Kishimoto.

"While it is difficult to give an exact timeline, we expect pilot-scale demonstrations within the next decade, with broader industrial adoption depending on progress in both technology and energy infrastructure. To achieve this, we are seeking corporate partners to engage in joint development."

More information: Ryo Ishibashi et al, Focused Thermal Energy at Atomic Microwave Antenna Sites for Eco-catalysis, Science Advances (2025). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.ady4043. www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.ady4043

Citation: Microwave technique allows energy-efficient chemical reactions (2025, October 10) retrieved 16 October 2025 from https://phys.org/news/2025-10-microwave-technique-energy-efficient-chemical.html

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