Process intensification of the continuous synthesis of bio-derived monomers for sustainable coatings using a Taylor vortex flow reactor
We describe the optimization and scale-up of two consecutive reaction steps in the synthesis of bio-derived alkoxybutenolide monomers that have been reported as potential replacements for acrylate-based coatings ( Sci. Adv. 2020, 6, eabe0026). These monomers are synthesized by (i) oxidation of furfural with photogenerated singlet oxygen followed by (ii) thermal condensation of the desired 5-hydroxyfuranone intermediate product with an alcohol, a step which until now has involved a lengthy batch reaction. The two steps have been successfully telescoped into a single kilogram-scale process without any need to isolate the 5-hydroxyfuranone between the steps. Our process development involved FTIR reaction monitoring, FTIR data analysis via 2D visualization, and two different photoreactors: (i) a semicontinuous photoreactor based on a modified rotary evaporator, where FTIR and 2D correlation spectroscopy (2D-COS) revealed the loss of the methyl formate coproduct, and (ii) our fully continuous Taylor Vortex photoreactor, which enhanced the mass transfer and permitted the use of near-stoichiometric equivalents of O2. The use of in-line FTIR monitoring and modeling greatly accelerated process optimization in the Vortex reactor. This led to scale-up of the photo-oxidation in 85% yield with a projected productivity of 1.3 kg day–1 and a space-time yield of 0.06 mol day–1 mL–1. Higher productivities could be achieved while sacrificing yield (e.g., 4 kg day–1 at 40% yield). The use of superheated methanol at 200 °C in a pressurized thermal flow reactor accelerated the second step, the thermal condensation of 5-hydroxyfuranone, from a 20 h batch reflux reaction (0.5 L, 85 g) to a space time of <1 min in a reactor only 3 mL in volume operating with projected productivities of >700 g day–1. Proof of concept for telescoping the two steps was established with an overall two-step yield of 67%, producing a process with a projected productivity of 1.1 kg day–1 for the methoxybutenolide monomer without any purification of the 5-hydroxyfuranone intermediate.
Funding
Photo-Electro: Transforming Chemical Synthesis, Discovery and Manufacture
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council
Find out more...The University of Nottingham EPSRC Impact Acceleration Account
EPSRC and SFI Centre for Doctoral Training in Sustainable Chemistry: Atoms-2-Products an Integrated Approach to Sustainable Chemistry
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council
Find out more...History
School
- Aeronautical, Automotive, Chemical and Materials Engineering
Published in
Organic Process Research & DevelopmentVolume
28Issue
5Pages
1917 - 1928Publisher
American Chemical Society (ACS)Version
- VoR (Version of Record)
Rights holder
© The AuthorsPublisher statement
This publication is licensed under CC-BY 4.0 .Publication date
2024-05-09Copyright date
2024ISSN
1083-6160eISSN
1520-586XPublisher version
Language
- en