Hey zaphraud!
What you're saying sounds really interesting. I did a web-search as you suggested, but I found nothing relevant. Do you happen to have any relevant references to share?
Thanks,
Vedran
A good starter:
How Could and Do Microwaves Influence Chemistry at Interfaces?
Wm. Curtis Conner* and Geoffrey A. Tompsett
Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts 01003
Received: September 18, 2007; In Final Form: October 22, 2007
..more or less as of 2007, the best way to find out whats gonna happen in a particular microwave reaction is just to try it.
Strange stuff is possible; for example in this paper one interesting thing discussed is the roughly 200K difference in temperature between benzene and methanol with the two are heated by microwave within a zeolite. This is a huge, not typically seen difference between the temperatures of two very tiny concentrations of reagent that for all practical purposes, takes the usual "rules of thumb" that people so cherish from thermodynamics, and upends them completely.
Also, given the fact that this otherwise highly sophisticated heating tool has become dirt-cheap due to commonplace use in the home kitchen, there is not really any reason to just go on ignoring it as a source of pesky anomalies.
The home microwave furnace stands to change humanities ability to manipulate chemistry as much as the invention of fire did.
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I dug up a ref for someone making ethylbenzene with benzene, ethanol, and zeolite at elevated temperatures. FWIW, one of the best ways to heat reagents in zeolite is with microwaves, because of their awesome penetrating power thru that otherwise insulating catalyst.