The article explores the potential of Smart Microcontainer (SMC) technology. The essence of the innovation is to create microscopic capsules that hold active reagents and release them in response to specific external signals - temperature change, pH, exposure to magnetic field or ultrasound. This real-time, point-to-point reaction control capability paves the way for overcoming limitations of modern chemical technology. Three practically significant areas of application are considered. The first is polymerization control, when SMC solve the critical problem of heat dissipation and temperature fluctuations, which enables not only to increase safety, but also to significantly narrow the molecular weight distribution of the final product. The second area is catalysis. Microencapsulation of highly active but sophisticated Lewis acids enables to create heterogeneous systems that combine the efficiency of a homogeneous catalyst with the ease of its recovery and regeneration. This dramatically reduces reagent consumption and minimizes toxic waste generation in processes such as Friedel-Crafts acylation. Particular attention is paid to olefin epoxidation processes, traditionally associated with high risks of thermal overclocking and low selectivity. Controlled release of hydrogen peroxide from microcontainers eliminates dangerous local overconcentrations, smooths exothermics, and suppresses unwanted acid-catalyzed epoxy ring opening. Thus, SMC technology represents an integrated approach that takes into account safety, selectivity, resource savings and ecology, puts SMC as the basis for the transition to smarter, more efficient and sustainable production processes in the future.
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