Stirring the Debate: How Mixing Influences Reproducibility and Efficiency in Synthetic Organic Chemistry
Jasper H. A. Schuurmans, Stefan D. A. Zondag, Arnab Chaudhuri, John van der Schaaf, Timothy Noël
Abstract
Mixing is essential in chemical processes, ensuring the proximity and interaction of reactants. Recent reports suggest stirring may minimally affect some solution-phase organic reactions, but this oversimplifies mixing's complexity. We discuss its principles, relevance to organic synthesis, and practical considerations for reproducibility and safety. Even if some reactions seem agitation-insensitive, mixing remains crucial for reproducibility, scalability, and industrial applications.
Topics & Concepts
Mixing (physics)ReproducibilityOrganic synthesisChemistryRelevance (law)Process engineeringBiochemical engineeringChemical engineeringMaterials scienceNanotechnologyOrganic chemicalsChemical reactionOrganic chemistryInnovative Microfluidic and Catalytic Techniques InnovationCyclization and Aryne ChemistryChemical Synthesis and Analysis