Photo: Joachim Rode

They can make ketchup flow smoothly

Food technology Physics
A DTU inventor and his partner have started their own business based on a microfluid chip that measures the flow properties of liquid products from paint to ketchup.

Fluidan, a small start-up that has just emerged from DTU is ready to launch an invention with the potential to revolutionize the market for measuring the flow properties and viscosity of liquids. The invention is based on a new microfluid chip technology, which measures whether liquids such as yoghurt, creams, shampoo, and paint are flowing in the most appropriate way.

When production begins of the ‘micro-rheometer’, as it is known, it will be possible to install the device in the customer’s factory to measure liquids directly and continuously from the very pipes used in the production process. This makes the invention unique. At present, production specialists measure flow properties by running back and forth between factory and laboratory, alternately tapping fluids and carrying out measurements.

According to one of the founders, Anders L. Østergård—a chemical engineer and business manager with 25 years of experience of industrial markets and food ingredients—companies may be able to save up to DKK 1 million a year by installing a single unit:

"Today, it may take longer to perform quality assurance on liquid products than it does to produce them, because the measurement methods are extremely time-consuming. Eliminating this traditional procedure would make it possible to double production. We are therefore hoping to introduce a new mindset and make it ‘standard operating procedure’ to measure flow properties in the same way as temperature and pH value.”

The invention can be used during production as well as in research and development for the benefit of food producers, companies operating in the chemical, colour and paint industry, and refineries. It should also benefit companies that make process equipment, as well as players in the oil industry.

Speeding up the process
The inventor of the new measurement method is Fridolin Okkels, a graduate physicist who, until recently, held the position of associate professor at DTU Nanotech, where he worked with fluids and optimized structures.

He filed the first patent in 2011, and then in March 2014 he met Anders L. Østergård through Copenhagen Spin-outs—an organization devoted to creating viable biotech and food technology companies based on public sector research. Just before Christmas, the team concluded a licensing agreement with DTU and a financing agreement with an investor. They officially opened the doors to their new business on 1 January this year.

""Today, it may take longer to perform quality assurance on liquid products than it does to produce them, because the measurement methods are extremely time-consuming""
Anders L. Østergård, Fluidan

“The invention unites microfluidics with structure optimization—precisely the two areas that have fascinated me throughout my career. I also noticed that even though manufacturing companies spend a lot of time measuring flow properties with a classic rheometer, they generally only use one or two critical values. So I thought that if I could measure the values in a single run, I could speed up the process,” relates Fridolin Okkels.

Global workplace
The company has already proved that the technology works in the lab at DTU Food. The next step is to test it in real life conditions to check whether it is sufficiently robust and can operate 24/7. In the long term, it should be possible to develop a mobile device of around the size of a USB pen. Anders L. Østergård explains:

“The global market for equipment to measure flow properties is currently worth around DKK 1.5 billion. Our target is to be generating an annual turnover of DKK 20–40 million four or five years from now. The actual figure could be much higher in the long term, given that we have the whole world as our workplace.

Article in DTUavisen no. 2, February 2015.

Students wanted

Students have the opportunity to get in on the ground floor of an exciting industry that combines food production withmeasurement technology, modelling and mathematical processes. Fluidan is looking for students who are getting ready to start work on their MSc project. Looking to the future, there are also likely to be openings for PhD students.