12 research outputs found

    ZIF-8 metal organic framework for the conversion of glucose to fructose and 5-hydroxymethyl furfural

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    Herein, Zeolitic imidazolate framework-8 (ZIF-8) is considered as an easy and cheap to prepare alternative catalyst for the isomerization of glucose and production of 5-hydroxymethyl furfural (HMF). For the synthesis of the ZIF-8 catalysts two preparation methods were evaluated, being room temperature and hydrothermal synthesis at 140 °C. Of these, the hydrothermal synthesis method yields a material with exceptionally high surface area (1967 m2·g−1). As a catalyst, the ZIF-8 materials generated excellent fructose yields. Specifically, ZIF-8 prepared by hydrothermal synthesis yielded a fructose selectivity of 65% with a glucose conversion of 24% at 100 °C in aqueous reaction medium. However, this selectivity dropped dramatically when the reactions were repeated at higher temperatures (~140 °C). Interestingly, greater quantities of mannose were produced at higher temperatures too. The lack of strong Brønsted acidity in both ZIF-8 materials resulted in poor HMF yields. In order to improve HMF yields, reactions were performed at a lower pH of 1.0. At 140 °C the lower pH was found to drive the reaction towards HMF and double its yield. Despite the excellent performance of ZIF-8 catalysts in batch reactions, their activity did not translate well to the flow reactor over a continuous run of 8 h, which was operating with a residence time of 6 min. The activity of ZIF-8 halved in the flow reactor at 100 °C in ~3 h, which implies that the catalyst’s stability was not maintained in the long run

    Systematic modification of UiO‐66 metal‐organic frameworks for glucose conversion into 5‐hydroxymethyl furfural in water

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    Metal organic framework UiO‐66 is studied as an adaptable heterogeneous catalyst for glucose conversion. UiO‐66 was modified by; i) partial linker substitution, ii) particle size modulation and iii) linker defects. We studied the effect of crystallinity and functional groups on the glucose conversion and product yields. The main products are: i) fructose from the isomerisation of glucose, ii) mannose from the epimerisation of glucose and iii) 5‐hydroxymethyl furfural from the dehydration of fructose. We found that defective and nano crystalline UiO‐66 catalyst performs best for isomerisation. When 50 % of the linkers of UiO‐66 are replaced by a sulfonate‐containing linker, the catalyst shows higher isomerisation activity than other UiO‐66 catalysts. Naphthalene‐dicarboxylate linkers were introduced to induce hydrophobicity and this catalyst further increased isomerisation activity showing 31 % fructose selectivity. Finally, the promising catalysts were tested in a flow reactor and a bifunctional mixed linker catalyst possessing both hydrophobic and acidic functional groups is shown to be stable in a time‐on‐stream study

    Zeolite and metal-organic framework catalysts for the production of value added platform molecules from biomass derived carbohydrates

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    This thesis explores the development of zeolite and metal-organic framework (MOF) catalysts for the production of value-added monomers. In particular, work focuses on the production of a platform molecule, 5-hydroxylmethylfurfural (HMF), from sugars obtained from widely available and renewable biomass resources. The production of HMF from glucose, the cheapest and most abundant hexose contained within lignocellulosic biomass, may proceed via an initial isomerisation reaction towards fructose. As such, the catalysts in this thesis target glucose isomerisation as well as HMF production. Work begins with the production of metal-containing beta zeolites using a rapid synthesis technique. This method effectively reduces the synthesis times of metal-containing beta zeolites from 40 days to 3 days. A number of different metals were successfully introduced into the beta zeolite framework. The materials were tested as glucose isomerisation and dehydration catalysts in various reaction solvents. Following this, a post-synthesis technique was used to produce metal-containing zeolite Y catalysts. Again, materials were tested as glucose isomerisation and dehydration catalysts in various solvents. With regards to MOFs, a series of initial studies explore the catalytic activities of several known frameworks; MIL-88B, Yb6(BDC)7(OH)4(H2O)4, ZIF-8, and UiO-66. Of these, a functionalised zirconium UiO-66 material was found to be of considerable interest as a glucose isomerisation catalyst in water. As such, the catalytic abilities of functionalised zirconium MOFs, UiO-66 and UiO-67, were studied further in a final experimental chapter. This final study highlights the potential to “fine-tune” MOF catalysts towards the production of fructose and HMF. The catalytic tests within this thesis are generally preformed within batch reactors. However, a number of highly promising catalysts were also tested within a purpose built continuous flow reactor. The stability and reusability of numerous catalysts are explored. Preference is given to water mediated reactions, although alternative reaction solvents are also considered

    New Method for the Estimation of Viscosity of Pure and Mixtures of Ionic Liquids Based on the UNIFAC–VISCO Model

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    A modified UNIFAC–VISCO group contribution method was developed for the correlation and prediction of viscosity of ionic liquids as a function of temperature at 0.1 MPa. In this original approach, cations and anions were regarded as peculiar molecular groups. The significance of this approach comes from the ability to calculate the viscosity of mixtures of ionic liquids as well as pure ionic liquids. Binary interaction parameters for selected cations and anions were determined by fitting the experimental viscosity data available in literature for selected ionic liquids. The temperature dependence on the viscosity of the cations and anions were fitted to a Vogel–Fulcher–Tamman behavior. Binary interaction parameters and VFT type fitting parameters were then used to determine the viscosity of pure and mixtures of ionic liquids with different combinations of cations and anions to ensure the validity of the prediction method. Consequently, the viscosities of binary ionic liquid mixtures were then calculated by using this prediction method. In this work, the viscosity data of pure ionic liquids and of binary mixtures of ionic liquids are successfully calculated from 293.15 K to 363.15 K at 0.1 MPa. All calculated viscosity data showed excellent agreement with experimental data with a relative absolute average deviation lower than 1.7%

    Heterogeneous Catalysts for the Conversion of Glucose into 5-Hydroxymethyl Furfural

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    Lignocellulosic biomass, a cheap and plentiful resource, could play a key role in the production of sustainable chemicals. The simple sugars contained in the renewable lignocellulosic biomass can be converted into commercially valuable products such as 5-hydroxymethyl furfural (HMF). A platform molecule, HMF can be transformed into numerous chemical products with potential applications in a wide variety of industries. Of the hexoses contained in the lignocellulosic biomass, the successful production of HMF from glucose has been a challenge. Various heterogeneous catalysts have been proposed over the last decade, ranging from zeolites to metal organic frameworks. The reaction conditions vary in the reports in the literature, which makes it difficult to compare catalysts reported in different studies. In addition, the slight variations in the synthesis of the same material in different laboratories may affect the activity results, because the selectivity towards desired products in this transformation strongly depends on the nature of the active sites. This poses another difficulty for the comparison of different reports. Furthermore, over the last decade the new catalytic systems proposed have increased profoundly. In this article, we summarize the heterogeneous catalysts: Metal Organic Frameworks (MOFs), zeolites and conventional supported catalysts, that have been reported in the recent literature and provide an overview of the observed catalytic activity, in order to provide a comparison

    New Method Based on the UNIFAC–VISCO Model for the Estimation of Ionic Liquids Viscosity Using the Experimental Data Recommended by Mathematical Gnostics

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    The viscosity of ionic liquids (ILs) has been modeled as a function of temperature and at atmospheric pressure using a new method based on the UNIFAC–VISCO method. This model extends the calculations previously reported by our group (see Zhao et al. <i>J. Chem. Eng. Data</i> <b>2016</b>, 61, 2160–2169) which used 154 experimental viscosity data points of 25 ionic liquids for regression of a set of binary interaction parameters and ion Vogel–Fulcher–Tammann (VFT) parameters. Discrepancies in the experimental data of the same IL affect the quality of the correlation and thus the development of the predictive method. In this work, mathematical gnostics was used to analyze the experimental data from different sources and recommend one set of reliable data for each IL. These recommended data (totally 819 data points) for 70 ILs were correlated using this model to obtain an extended set of binary interaction parameters and ion VFT parameters, with a regression accuracy of 1.4%. In addition, 966 experimental viscosity data points for 11 binary mixtures of ILs were collected from literature to establish this model. All the binary data consist of 128 training data points used for the optimization of binary interaction parameters and 838 test data points used for the comparison of the pure evaluated values. The relative average absolute deviation (RAAD) for training and test is 2.9% and 3.9%, respectively

    Systematic Modification of UiO‐66 Metal‐Organic Frameworks for Glucose Conversion into 5‐Hydroxymethyl Furfural in Water

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    Metal organic framework UiO‐66 is studied as an adaptable heterogeneous catalyst for glucose conversion. UiO‐66 was modified by; i) partial linker substitution, ii) particle size modulation and iii) linker defects. We studied the effect of crystallinity and functional groups on the glucose conversion and product yields. The main products are: i) fructose from the isomerisation of glucose, ii) mannose from the epimerisation of glucose and iii) 5‐hydroxymethyl furfural from the dehydration of fructose. We found that defective and nano crystalline UiO‐66 catalyst performs best for isomerisation. When 50 % of the linkers of UiO‐66 are replaced by a sulfonate‐containing linker, the catalyst shows higher isomerisation activity than other UiO‐66 catalysts. Naphthalene‐dicarboxylate linkers were introduced to induce hydrophobicity and this catalyst further increased isomerisation activity showing 31 % fructose selectivity. Finally, the promising catalysts were tested in a flow reactor and a bifunctional mixed linker catalyst possessing both hydrophobic and acidic functional groups is shown to be stable in a time‐on‐stream study

    Gallium and tin exchanged Y zeolites for glucose isomerisation and 5-hydroxymethyl furfural production

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    This study demonstrates the use of gallium and tin modified Y zeolites as catalysts for the conversion of glucose into fructose, mannose and 5-Hydroxymethyl furfural. These catalysts can be synthesised via a simple and scalable procedure that uses commercially available Y zeolite. The catalysts were characterised by various techniques including elemental analysis, electron microscopy, nitrogen physisorption, X-ray diffraction, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, ultraviolet-visible spectroscopy, solid state nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and X-ray absorption near edge spectroscopy. It is found that tin containing Y zeolite generate a glucose conversion of 36 % and total product yield of 17 % in water. Meanwhile, gallium containing Y zeolite shows an HMF yield of 33 % when reactions were conducted in DMSO. The recyclability of tin and gallium containing Y zeolites were studied in DMSO and the activities of both materials were shown to remain stable. Furthermore, the spent catalysts can be regenerated via calcination in air

    Data for Systematic modification of UiO‐66 metal‐organic frameworks for glucose conversion into 5‐hydroxymethyl furfural in water

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    Metal organic framework UiO‐66 is studied as an adaptable heterogeneous catalyst for glucose conversion. UiO‐66 was modified by; i) partial linker substitution, ii) particle size modulation and iii) linker defects. We studied the effect of crystallinity and functional groups on the glucose conversion and product yields. The main products are: i) fructose from the isomerisation of glucose, ii) mannose from the epimerisation of glucose and iii) 5‐hydroxymethyl furfural from the dehydration of fructose. We found that defective and nano crystalline UiO‐66 catalyst performs best for isomerisation. When 50 % of the linkers of UiO‐66 are replaced by a sulfonate‐containing linker, the catalyst shows higher isomerisation activity than other UiO‐66 catalysts. Naphthalene‐dicarboxylate linkers were introduced to induce hydrophobicity and this catalyst further increased isomerisation activity showing 31 % fructose selectivity. Finally, the promising catalysts were tested in a flow reactor and a bifunctional mixed linker catalyst possessing both hydrophobic and acidic functional groups is shown to be stable in a time‐on‐stream study
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