Even Heating John replied to the topic: Even Heating
Desert Sage, thanks so much for your very helpful reply! I didn't know if anyone would respond.
Desert Sage wrote: The first question: Is it possible? Yes.
Woohoo! That's good news.
A more important question would be is it practical?
Yes, that is the bottom line question in the end.
The second question: Is there anyone doing this commercially? Not to my knowledge.
OK, good to know.
After making sure they were all lined up (so I could use linear polarization) I would look for the resonant frequency of the little straws (and their filling) and pick a frequency accordingly (use resonance to my advantage). At that point it is relatively easy to control the power level driving the heating. It would be a much more difficult problem if the little straws were strewn about and/or they all have different resonance frequencies.
No problem lining them up! The straws will be heated one at a time, and their location and orientation can be controlled to be the same every time. In fact, I was thinking that the cylindrical chamber that the straw slides into could itself be what I think you call the "reaction chamber" -- that is, the reaction chamber would be very small, just big enough for one straw to fit into. Straws are 5 inches long by 0.1 inches diameter, by the way.
I would suspect if the little straws were precisely manufactured to precise dimensions and coated with a lossy material (on the outside) the problem would get significantly easier. Good thermal conductivity (of the precision straws) would ensure there would be no hot/cold spots.
Now, I didn't make it clear, but I'm sure you guessed: it is actually the filling we care about heating, not the straw itself. The filling is biological; essentially an aqueous solution. So thermally, it will behave kind of like liquid egg whites. The straw is made of a PVC material. I am not sure what you mean by "a lossy material" -- lossy in what way, and is PVC lossy? The straws are definitely precision manufactured to set dimensions -- approx. +/- .002".