Nanoscale Process Systems Engineering

Start
Feb 10, 2009 - 16:00
End
Feb 10, 2009 - 17:00
Venue
Creativity Hall (Room 118) Chemical Engineering
Event Type
Speaker
Prof. George Stephanopoulos Department of Chemical Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge MA. 02139
Title
Nanoscale Process Systems Engineering: Towards Molecular Factories Synthetic Cells and Adaptive Devices
Research in nanoscale science and engineering has been primarily directed towards the design and manufacturing of (a) materials with passive nanostructures (e.g. nanostructured coatings dispersion of nanoparticles and bulk nanostructured metals polymers and ceramics) and (b) active devices with nanostructured materials (e.g. transistors amplifiers targeted drugs and delivery systems actuators and adaptive structures). Research on the design fabrication and operation of integrated “nanoscale factories” i.e. processes with unit operations and materials movement among these units at the nanoscale along with the requisite energy supply system and monitoring and control infrastructure is lagging seriously behind. It is progress at this frontier that will enable the research visions of molecular factories synthetic cells and adaptive devices (e.g. artificial tissues and sensorial systems nano-system biology for health care and agricultural systems scalable plasmonic devices chemico-mechanical processing targeted cell therapy and nano-devices human-machine interfaces at the tissue and nervous system level) to become reality. Process Systems Engineering (PSE) as an area of academic chemical engineering research has effectively solved all the major technological problems associated with simulation design control diagnosis scheduling and planning of operations for large-scale continuous and batch chemical processes. As the focus of research moved in scale from cubic meters to cubic millimeters the design simulation control and programmed operation of “plants or labs on a chip” benefited from the accumulated PSE technologies since the underlying physico-chemical phenomena could still be handled under the same assumption of effective continuous media. However integration of functional nanoscale unit operations into a coherent process with specific overall functionality and behavior has not yet started in earnest and has only been mentioned in passing as a future goal and justification of current research.With the proposition of “nanoscale factories” as the next frontier of processing scales PSE must offer new theories and tools to handle the design simulation operation and control of active processing systems with the following distinguishing features: (a) The “unit operations” are self-assembled supra-molecular structures at the scale of a few nanometers. (b) The spatial topology of the “process flowsheets” is guided by molecular scaffolds and the unit operations are positioned in space through directed self-organization mechanisms of independent units. (c) The operation of such “supramolecular factories” is driven by pre-programmed information encoded in the design of the system itself and is robustly controllable through local feedback loops with no evidence of centralized coordination mechanisms. In this presentation I will focus on two points: First I will offer a series of research propositions that need to be addressed before Nanoscale PSE can tackle the deliberate engineering of living cells or the design of new classes of materials and devices based on active processing systems at the scale of a few nanometers. Second I will discuss one specific engineering problem arising from the above i.e. the construction of nanostructures with desired geometric features and the design principles and methodologies guiding such a construction.