17 research outputs found

    Continuous flow Buchwald–Hartwig amination of a pharmaceutical intermediate

    Get PDF
    A flow process for direct amination of a pharmaceutically relevant substrate using a Pd-NHC based catalyst was demonstrated in a lab-scale mini-plant and in a pilot-scale plant. The lab-scale mini-plant was used to determine catalyst stability under recycling conditions. Results in the mini-plant have shown the maximum space–time yield between the three types of reactor systems: a batch reactor, a mini-plant and a pilot plant. A comprehensive life-cycle assessment study of the synthesis of organometallic catalysts and their impact on the overall LCA of flow vs. batch syntheses was developed. Combined with a simplified economic analysis, the LCA study confirmed the benefits of switching to flow.The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Research Council under the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (EC FP7) Grant Agreement n. [NMP2-SL-2012-280827].This is the final version of the article. It was first available from RSC via http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/C5RE00048

    Evolution of active catalysts for the selective oxidative dehydrogenation of methanol on Fe2O3 surface doped with Mo oxide

    No full text
    Iron molybdate catalysts are used for the selective oxidation of methanol to formaldehyde. In this paper we have attempted to understand what determines high selectivity in this reaction system by doping haematite with surface layers of Mo by incipient wetness impregnation. This works well and the Mo appears to form finely dispersed layers. Even very low loadings of Mo have a marked effect on improving the selectivity to formaldehyde. Haematite itself is a very poor catalyst with high selectivity to combustion products, whereas, when only 0.25 monolayers of Mo are deposited on the surface, formaldehyde and CO selectivities are greatly enhanced and CO2 production is greatly diminished. However, even with as much as seven monolayers of Mo dosed on to the surface, these materials achieve much less selectivity to formaldehyde at high conversion than do the industrial catalysts. The reason for this is that the Mo forms a 'skin' of ferric molybdate on a core of iron oxide, but does not produce a pure Mo oxide monolayer on the surface, a situation which is essential for very high yields of formaldehyde

    Facile stoichiometric reductions in flow : an example of artemisinin

    No full text
    Stoichiometric reduction of artemisinin to dihydroartemisinin (DHA) has been successfully transferred from batch to continuous flow conditions with a significant increase in productivity and an increase in selectivity. The DHA space-time-yield of up to 1.6 kg h–1 L–1 was attained which represents a 42 times increase in throughput compared to that of conventional batch process
    corecore