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Flash Joule heating for synthesis, upcycling and remediation

Bing DengLucas EddyApplied Physics Program, Rice University, Houston, TX, USAKevin M. WyssChandra Sekhar TiwarySchool of Nanoscience and Technology, Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur, IndiaJames M. TourDepartment of Chemistry, Rice University, Houston, TX, USA
2025en
ABI

Аннотация

Electric heating methods are being developed and used to electrify industrial applications and lower their carbon emissions. Direct Joule resistive heating is an energy-efficient electric heating technique that has been widely tested at the bench scale and could replace some energy-intensive and carbon-intensive processes. In this Review, we discuss the use of flash Joule heating (FJH) in processes that are traditionally energy-intensive or carbon-intensive. FJH uses pulse current discharge to rapidly heat materials directly to a desired temperature; it has high-temperature capabilities (>3,000 °C), fast heating and cooling rates (>102 °C s−1), short duration (milliseconds to seconds) and high energy efficiency (~100%). Carbon materials and metastable inorganic materials can be synthesized using FJH from virgin materials and waste feedstocks. FJH is also applied in resource recovery (such as from e-waste) and waste upcycling. An emerging application is in environmental remediation, where FJH can be used to rapidly degrade perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances and to remove or immobilize heavy metals in soil and solid wastes. Life-cycle and technoeconomic analyses suggest that FJH can reduce energy consumption and carbon emissions and be cost-efficient compared with existing methods. Bringing FJH to industrially relevant scales requires further equipment and engineering development. Flash Joule heating is an energy-efficient electric heating method that is applied to materials synthesis, waste upcycling and environmental remediation. This Review discusses the fundamentals and use of flash Joule heating, its scalability and its sustainability compared with industrially used processes.

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