SYNTHESIS OF C3-C7 ALCOHOL FUEL COMPOSITIONS
In one embodiment, the present application discloses methods to selectively synthesize higher alcohols and hydrocarbons useful as fuels and industrial chemicals from syngas and biomass. Ketene and ketonization chemistry along with hydrogenation reactions are used to synthesize fuels and chemicals. In another embodiment, ketene used to form fuels and chemicals may be manufactured from acetic acid which in turn can be synthesized from synthesis gas which is produced from coal, biomass, natural gas, etc.
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This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/558,321 filed Nov. 10, 2011 entitled “Synthesis of Higher Alcohols”, U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/577,903 filed Dec. 20, 2011 entitled “Higher Calorific Alcohol and Alkane Fuels and Industrial Chemicals”, U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/614,937 filed Mar. 23, 2012 entitled “Synthesis of Hydrocarbon and Oxygenated Fuels and Chemicals”, U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/643,447 filed May 7, 2012 entitled “Selective Syngas Conversion to Butanol” and U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/667,093 filed Jul. 2, 2012, entitled “Synthesis of C5 and C6 Fuels and Chemicals”, all of which are incorporated herein by reference.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONPetroleum is a vital source of fuels for transportation, industrial chemicals that produce polymers, plastics, pharmaceuticals, paints and other important chemicals. However, due to economic, environmental and political factors, new sources besides petroleum are being sought for the production of these materials.
Technologies to manufacture industrial commodities such as methanol are mature and used to produce the world's supply from synthesis gas that comes from methane, coal, etc. Ethanol is produced by fermentation and hydration of ethylene produced from petroleum. Technology to produce ethanol from cellulose is still in development. Efforts have been made to develop a synthesis of ethanol from synthesis gas but no satisfactory technologies have materialized yet. There has been increased use of ethanol as a fuel additive and also as an automotive fuel itself. Ethanol does not have a high heat of combustion (30 MJ/kg ethanol vs 45 MJ/kg gasoline) thus yielding significantly lower mileage than gasoline. Another issue with ethanol is the difficulty of ethanol transport by pipeline due to its corrosivity.
Various efforts are underway to find economic fermentation processes to produce butanol which is also an important fuel alternative and industrial chemical. However the economy of these processes due to the time required for each fermentation cycle, environmental problems from large amounts of water consumption for these processes and difficulty of isolation of butanol from broths along with its toxicity to microbes are challenges that have not been overcome.
The present invention avoids these issues and is a novel method to synthesize fuels and chemicals from non-petroleum sources such as biomass, coal and natural gas. The synthetic manufacture of fuels and chemicals, for example alcohols and alkanes with four or more carbons, offers the potential for higher energy fuels that are readily compatible with existing automotive and transportation infrastructure.
In one embodiment of the present application, there is provided a process of using a ketene to form a diketene which is then reduced by hydrogen to form alcohol and hydrocarbon fuel and chemical raw materials. In one aspect, an acid, such as a two carbon acetic acid, is converted to a ketene which is dimerized and reduced to products with four or more carbons such as butanol, heptanol and other alcohols. The alcohols produced include compounds, such as alcohols, with three to nine carbons including butanol and its isomers, pentanol and its isomers, hexanol and its isomers, heptanol and its isomers, etc may be used as fuels which have a calorific values closer to gasoline.
In another embodiment, there is provided a process of using syngas as a feedstock to produce diketene which is then selectively hydrogenated to butanol via intermediate beta-butyrolactone. Ketene may be prepared from methanol, which may be carbonylated to form acetic acid and dehydrated to form ketene. In another aspect, the process provides diketene which is then selectively hydrogenated to butanol via an intermediate acetoacetate ester such as methyl acetoacetate. Diketene is readily produced from acetic acid by dimerization of ketene, ketene is produced by pyrolysis of acetic acid and acetic acid is manufactured from syngas via carbonylation of methanol. The alcohol products produced, such as 2-butanol and 1-butanol and heptanols have a calorific value closer to gasoline than ethanol. The 1-butanol and 2-butanol product of the present invention may be used individually or as mixtures.
Also disclosed is a process for converting ketene to diketene, converting diketene to dehydroacetic acid (3-acetyl-2-hydroxy-6-methyl-4H-pyran-4-one, “DHAA”) and reduction of DHAA to heptanols, heptanones or heptanes and other useful higher alcohols and alkanes. Diketene is prepared from acetic acid which can in turn be synthesized by the carbonylation of methanol or the oxidation of ethanol. The alcohols produced, such as 4-heptanol and some of its isomers and other products such as pentanol and its isomers, hexanol and its isomers, butanol and its isomers, heptanes and other alkanes, etc which may be used as fuels, have significantly higher calorific values close to gasoline and higher than ethanol and butanol fuel.
Another aspect, there is provided a process to convert two carbon acetic acid to seven carbon products like heptane, heptanone and heptanol using ketene, ketonization and hydrogenation chemistry. Synthesis gas is converted to acetic acid which is dehydrated to form ketene which is dimerized to form diketene. Diketene is converted to butyric acid which is ketonized to form 4-heptanone. 4-Heptanone may be reduced to 4-heptanol or heptanes and other useful higher alcohols and alkanes. The resulting products, such as 4-heptanol, heptane, etc. . . . which may be used as fuels, have significantly higher calorific values close to gasoline and higher than ethanol and butanol fuel. In another aspect, the heptanol prepared according to the processes are highly selective, and produces at least 60%, 65% or 80% heptanol. The products comprising mixtures of four or more carbon alcohols and alkanes are much more amenable to transport through existing pipeline structures.
Yet another aspect of the present invention is a process to convert ethanol to C5-6 alcohols, including 3-pentanol and 2-methylpentanol. In one embodiment ethanol is carbonylated to form propanoic acid which is dehydrated to form methyl ketene, methyl ketene is dimerized to form 2-methyl-4-ethylidene-oxetanone which is hydrogenated to form 2-methyl pentanol. In one embodiment, ethanol is carbonylated to form propanoic acid, propanoic acid is ketonized to form 3-pentanone and 3-pentanone is reduced to form 3-pentanol. In one aspect of the method, the fuel composition is blended with an automotive fuel.
In each of the product or product mixtures prepared according to the above processes, the products may also be used as solvents and chemicals in industry. In addition, the products may be blended with fuels such as gasoline, diesel or like fossil fuels or with a biofuel or synthetic fuels, and combinations thereof.
DefinitionsUnless specifically noted otherwise herein, the definitions of the terms used are standard definitions used in the art. Exemplary embodiments, aspects and variations are illustrated in the figures and drawings, and it is intended that the embodiments, aspects and variations, and the figures and drawings disclosed herein are to be considered illustrative and not limiting.
As used herein, an “alkyl” group is a straight, branched, cyclic, acylic, saturated or unsaturated, aliphatic group or alcoholic group having a chain of carbon atoms. A C1-C20 alkyl or C1-C20 alkanol, for example, may include alkyl groups that have a chain of between 1 and 20 carbon atoms, and include, for example, the groups methyl, ethyl, propyl, isopropyl, vinyl, allyl, 1-propenyl, isopropenyl, ethynyl, 1-propynyl, 2-propynyl, 1,3-butadienyl, penta-1,3-dienyl, penta-1,4-dienyl, hexa-1,3-dienyl, hexa-1,3,5-trienyl, and the like. An alkyl group may also be represented, for example, as a —(CR1R2)m— group where R1 and R2 are independently hydrogen or are independently absent, and for example, m is 1 to 8, and such representation is also intended to cover both saturated and unsaturated alkyl groups.
An “alkyl compound(s)” as used herein, is an alkyl containing 1 to 20 carbons (C1-C20 alkyl), and includes cyclic and acyclic alkanes, alkenes, alcohols, ketones and aromatics (e.g., benzene, toluene, ethyl benzene etc.) and mixtures thereof. The alkyl compound may be used as a raw material for chemical processing, a solvent or the alkyl compound may be used as a fuel or mixtures of fuels. Such fuel or mixtures of fuels may be further combined with other fuel or fuel products to form a gasoline. Non-exclusive examples of an alkyl compound include butane, 1-butanol, 2-butanol, 2-pentanol, 1-hexanol, 2-hexanol, 2-heptanol, 4-heptanol, 4-heptanone, 3-methyl cyclohexanol, 2,6-dimethyl-4-heptanol and mixtures thereof. Alkyl compounds of the present application exclude saturated beta-lactones.
A “cyclyl” such as a monocyclyl or polycyclyl group includes monocyclic, or linearly fused, angularly fused or bridged polycycloalkyl, or combinations thereof. Such cyclyl group is intended to include the heterocyclyl analogs. A cyclyl group may be saturated, partially saturated or aromatic.
An alkanol or an alcohol is a compound with an alkyl or cyclic alkyl group bearing a hydroxyl group. Examples of alcohols are methanol, ethanol, propanol, isopropanol, butanol (including 1-butanol, 2-butanol, isobutanol, tert-butanol), pentanol (and its isomers including 1-pentanol, 2-pentanol, 3-pentanol, isopentanol, neopentanol, cyclopentanol, etc) and straight chain, branched and cyclic isomers of other higher alcohols such as hexanol, cyclohexanol, methylcyclohexanol, heptanol (including 1-heptanol, 2-heptanol, 3-heptanol, 4-heptanol, iso-heptanol and other isomers), nonanol, etc. A higher alcohol is an alcohol having two or more carbons.
“Gasoline” is known to comprise of a complex mixture of volatile hydrocarbons suitable for use as a fuel in a spark-ignition internal combustion engine. Typically, gasoline boils over a range of about 27° C. to about 225° C. Gasoline may consist of a single blendstock, such as the product from a refinery alkylation unit, or it may comprise of a blend of several blendstocks. The blending of gasoline is well known in the art and may include a combination of three to twelve or more different blendstocks. Optimization of the blending process takes into account a plurality of characteristics of both the blendstocks and the resulting gasoline, and may include such characteristics as cost and various measurements of volatility, octane, boiling point characteristics and chemical composition. While hydrocarbons usually represent a major component of gasoline, certain oxygen containing organic compounds may be included as gasoline components. In one aspect, such oxygen containing organic compounds are referred to as “oxygenate” or “oxygenates,” and are important gasoline substitutes such as ethanol and butanol. Oxygenates are also useful as components in gasoline because they are usually of high octane and can be a more economical source of gasoline octane than a high octane hydrocarbon blending component such as alkylate or reformate. Oxygenates that may be used as gasoline blending agents include, but are not limited to, methanol, ethanol, tertiary-butyl alcohol, methyl tertiary-butyl ether, ethyl tertiary-butyl ether and methyl tertiary-amyl ether. Various catalysts may be used in reduction or hydrogenation reactions of the present application. The catalyst used may contain one or more transition metal such as ruthenium, palladium, platinum, rhodium, nickel, iridium, rhenium, copper, zinc, chromium, nickel, iron, cobalt or combinations of thereof. The catalyst may contain a combination of one or more transition metals with main group elements such as for example platinum and tin or ruthenium and tin. The catalyst may contain promoters such as barium hydroxide, magnesium hydroxide, etc. Reduction or hydrogenation may also be done using Raney type sponge catalysts such as Raney nickel, copper, cobalt, etc optionally bearing promoters such as iron, molybdenum, chromium, palladium, etc.
Catalysts used in reductions may be supported or unsupported. A supported catalyst is one in which the active metal or metals are deposited on a support material; e.g. prepared by soaking or wetting the support material with a metal solution, spraying or physical mixing followed by drying, calcination and finally reduction with hydrogen if necessary to produce the active catalyst. Catalyst support materials used frequently are porous solids with high surface areas such as silica, alumina, titania, magnesia, carbon, zirconia, zeolites etc.
The methods of the present invention can comprise, consist of, or consist essentially of the essential elements and limitations of the method described herein, as well as any additional or optional ingredients, components, or limitations described herein or otherwise useful in synthetic organic chemistry.
“Synthesis gas” or “syngas” is a mixture of varying amounts of carbon monoxide and hydrogen. Syngas maybe produced by the partial oxidation of materials such as methane, liquid hydrocarbons, coal, biomass, etc.
“Biomass” is material obtained from living or recently living organisms.
Acetic acid may be made by oxidation of ethanol produced by fermentation or conversion of synthesis gas to methanol followed by its carbonylation. Synthesis gas may be obtained in large quantities from biomass, coal, natural gas, etc.
In one embodiment acetic acid used in the invention is made from syngas. Syngas may be made from coal, natural gas or like fossil fuel. In another embodiment the acetic acid used in the invention is synthesized from syngas made from a renewable source such as biomass from corncobs, switchgrass, wood chips, recyclable materials like agricultural waste, land fill materials, industrial waste, municipal solid waste, sewage and the like.
Ketene maybe synthesized by various methods described in literature such as dehydration of acetic acid, pyrolysis of acetone or acetic anhydride, etc. In one embodiment ketene is synthesized from acetone. In another embodiment ketene is synthesized from acetic acid. In one embodiment, the ketene produced is dimerized to produce diketene which can be used directly in reduction steps or stored before reduction.
In various embodiments, there is provided methods to prepare alcohols from ketene and diketene. Ketene is dimerized to form diketene which is reduced to produce alcohols and carbon compounds such as hydrocarbons which can be used as fuels and chemicals for industry. In another embodiment diketene is hydrogenated to form a four carbon alcohol. In one embodiment, the product of hydrogenation is a mixture of 2-butanol and 1-butanol. In another embodiment, the hydrogenation product of diketene reduction is a mixture of alcohols including isomers of butanols, pentanols, hexanols, heptanol and higher and lower alcohols. These products may be used as a fuel directly or after purification.
Products such as butyric acid seen in the products of the invention (see Table 5a below) have lower calorific values than alcohols and hydrocarbons but are highly useful for conversion to seven carbon heptanol and heptanes and other high energy fuels and useful chemicals by ketonization and hydrogenation reactions.
In other embodiments, there is provided methods for preparing alcohols from ketene and diketene via beta-butyrolactone (BBL). Ketene is dimerized to form diketene, diketene is hydrogenated to form BBL which is hydrogenated to form butanols. In one embodiment, diketene is hydrogenated to form BBL which is hydrogenated to form butyric acid or a mixture of butanols, butyric acid and its esters. In one embodiment, diketene is hydrogenated to form a mixture of higher alcohols including three carbon and higher alcohols. In a variation of this embodiment, diketene is hydrogenated to form a mixture of higher alcohols and alkanes. In another embodiment diketene is reacted with an alcohol to form an acetoacetate ester which is hydrogenated to form butanol. In one embodiment diketene is converted to methyl acetoacetate and reduced to form a butanol based product such as a mixture of 2-butanol and 1-butanol along with methanol. In one embodiment diketene is converted to butyl acetoacetate by reaction of butanol and diketene and reduced to form a butanol based product such as a mixture of 2-butanol and 1-butanol. In one embodiment diketene is converted to methyl acetoacetate and reduced in situ to form a butanol based product such as a mixture of 2-butanol, 1-butanol and methanol.
In one embodiment diketene is converted to butyl acetoacetate by reaction of butanol and diketene and reduced in situ to form a butanol based product such as a mixture of 2-butanol and 1-butanol. BBL may be made by the reduction of diketene, by oxidation and carbonylation of propylene or by reaction of acetaldehyde with ketene. In one embodiment the reduction of diketene to BBL and then to butyric acid is done with Raney nickel.
In one embodiment the reduction of diketene to BBL and then to butanol is done with a Copper Zinc catalyst commercially available from Johnson Matthey called the CZ29/2T catalyst. In one embodiment the reduction of diketene to BBL and then to butanol is done with Ni/alumina catalyst. In one embodiment, the reduction of the diketene is done at a temperature between 50 and 350° C. in the presence of a catalyst. In one embodiment the reduction of diketene is done with a copper zinc catalyst commercially available from Johnson Matthey called the CZ29/2T catalyst. Hydrogen pressures required for reduction of diketene maybe from 10 psi to 1600 psi. In one embodiment the reduction of diketene is done at a pressure range of 200 to 500 psi.
In one embodiment the reduction of BBL to butanols is done with a Copper Zinc catalyst commercially available from Johnson Matthey called the CZ29/2T catalyst. In another aspect, the reduction BBL to butanols is done with Ni/alumina catalyst. In another aspect, the reduction of BBL is done at a temperature between 50 and 350° C. in the presence of a catalyst. Hydrogen pressures required for reduction of BBL maybe from 10 psi to 1600 psi. In one embodiment the reduction of BBL is done at a pressure range of 200 to 500 psi or more preferably 300 to 500 psi.
In one embodiment, the ketene produced is dimerized to produce diketene which can be converted to dehydroacetic acid (DHAA) in situ and hydrogenated to form higher alcohols and hydrocarbons. In one variation, methanol is used as a source of hydrogen using a copper based catalyst, such as a copper chromite based catalyst. In another aspect, diketene is converted to DHAA in a separate process step which is then reduced to form a heptanol product, which may be purified to a fuel grade composition. In another aspect, the alcohol mixture product synthesized from diketene starting material is dehydrated to yield a mixture of unsaturated hydrocarbons which is in turn hydrogenated to produce a mixture of hydrocarbons. In another aspect, DHAA is hydrogenated in the presence of a catalyst to form a mixture of alcohols and hydrocarbons. In one aspect of the above, the fuel composition is a mixture of ketones, alcohols and alkanes. In one variation of the above, the relative ratios of the ketones, alcohols and alkanes may be adjusted by varying the temperature of the hydrogenation and/or dehydration reaction. In another aspect of the above, the reduction of 4-heptanone, the dehydration of the 4-heptanol and the reduction to form heptane are all performed over the same catalyst bed.
In another embodiment, the alcohol mixture product synthesized from reduction of DHAA is converted directly in a single process step to hydrocarbons. In one embodiment the reduction of DHAA is done with a copper chromite, barium promoted catalyst (Cr2CuO4, CuO, BaO, Graphite, CrO3, Cr2O3). In another aspect, the reduction may be done by a copper zinc catalyst. An example of the later is commercially available from Johnson Matthey called the CZ29/2T catalyst. In another aspect, the hydrogenation of DHAA may be done over a 2% ruthenium on alumina catalyst. In another aspect, the reduction of DHAA is done at a temperature between 50 and 350° C. in the presence of a catalyst. Hydrogen pressures required for reduction of DHAA may be from 10 psi to 1600 psi. In one embodiment, the reduction of DHAA is done at a pressure range of 200 to 500 psi. In another aspect, reduction of DHAA is done at 300 psi hydrogen pressure at 300° C.; or at 300 psi hydrogen pressure at 200° C. In another embodiment DHAA can be hydrogenated to 4-heptanone, mixture of 4-heptanone and 4-heptanol or to 4-heptanol. In one embodiment, alcohols are dehydrated to yield a mixture of unsaturated hydrocarbons using gamma-alumina, ZSM-5 or like agents to form unsaturated hydrocarbon products which are in turn hydrogenated to produce a mixture of hydrocarbons.
In another embodiment, there is provided methods to prepare alcohols, ketones and alkanes. Ketene is dimerized to form diketene which is hydrogenated to form butyric acid. Butyric acid is ketonized to produce 4-heptanone which is reduced to form 4-heptanol which may be further converted to heptane, which can be used individually or as mixtures of compounds as fuels, solvents and chemicals for industry. In another aspect, ketonization provides 4-heptanone with conversion of at least 85%, 95%, 98% or 99%. In another aspect, the hydrogenation of the composition comprising 4-heptanone provides a mixture comprising butanol and 4-heptanol. In one aspect of the above, the hydrogenation of 4-heptanone provides a composition that is rich in 4-heptanol. In another aspect, the hydrogenation catalyst, such as the hydrogenation of 4-heptanone, comprises a transition metal or a mixture of two or more transition metals. In another aspect, the catalyst is a copper chromite barium promoted catalyst, or a copper and zinc based catalyst. In one aspect of the above, the mixture comprising 4-heptanone, 4-heptanol, 3-heptene or isomers thereof and heptanes, or mixtures thereof, may be used as a fuel, or further blended with gasoline to form a blended fuel mixture. In one aspect of the above method, the linear and branched heptanes formed comprise of 1-heptene, 2-heptene, 3-heptene, 3-methyl-3-hexene, 3-methyl-2-hexene, 3-methyl-1-hexene, 3-methyl-4-hexene and mixtures thereof. In another aspect, the zeolite is a ZSM-5 catalyst. In another aspect of the method, the catalyst is a nickel on alumina catalyst. In another aspect of the above method, the reduction or hydrogenation, the dehydration, the hydrogenation and the isomerization steps are performed in a single reactor or reaction vessel using the same catalyst and catalyst bed, or mixture of catalyst and using the same catalyst bed.
In another embodiment butyric acid is ketonized to form a product containing 4-heptanone and some unreacted butyric acid which is hydrogenated to form 4-heptanol and butanol. This product may be used as a fuel, solvent or useful industrial chemical product directly or after purification into useful chemical products. In another aspect, diketene is reduced to form butyric acid which is converted to 4-heptanone. The 4-heptanone is reduced to form 4-heptanol. The 4-heptanol may be dehydrated and reduced to form heptanes. In another aspect, the 4-heptanone is hydrogenated to 4-heptanol, dehydrated to form heptenes and the heptenes reduced to form heptanes in the same reactor using a catalyst and hydrogen.
In another embodiment, butyric acid is synthesized from beta-butyrolactone which is synthesized from other starting materials such as propylene, acetaldehyde and ketene, etc. In one embodiment, butyric acid is synthesized by carbonylation of n-propanol. In another embodiment, butyric acid is synthesized by carbonylation of n-propanol and n-propanol is obtained from the carbonylation and subsequent reduction of the propanoic acid product from ethanol. In one aspect of the above, the alkyl compound is further purified to produce a fuel with a higher caloric value than ethanol.
In one embodiment, 4-heptanone is hydrogenated to 4-heptanol, 4-heptanol converted to heptanes and the heptanes formed isomerized to form a mixture of branched hydrocarbons. In a variation of the embodiment, the branched hydrocarbon rich product is used as a fuel. In another embodiment, the catalyst used in the reduction/dehydration/hydrogenation of 4-heptanone to form heptane is a copper/zinc oxide catalyst.
In one embodiment, alcohols are dehydrated to yield a mixture of unsaturated hydrocarbons which are in turn hydrogenated to produce a mixture of hydrocarbons. In another embodiment, alcohols are dehydrated to yield a mixture of unsaturated hydrocarbons using gamma-alumina, ZSM-5 or like agents to form unsaturated hydrocarbon products which are in turn hydrogenated to produce a mixture of branched hydrocarbons. In another embodiment, alcohols are dehydrated and reduced to form a product that contains straight chain saturated hydrocarbons that are isomerized over a zeolite catalyst to yield a mixture of branched hydrocarbons. In another embodiment, heptanol is dehydrated and reduced to form a product that contains straight chain hydrocarbons such as heptane that are reacted over a zeolite catalyst such as ZSM-5 to yield a mixture of C14 hydrocarbons. In one embodiment the reduction of 4-heptanone is done with a copper chromite, barium promoted catalyst (62-64% Cr2CuO4, 22-24% CuO, 6% BaO, 0-4% Graphite, 1% CrO3, 1% Cr2O3). In another aspect, the reduction of 4-heptanone may be done by a copper zinc catalyst. An example of the later is commercially available from Johnson Matthey called the CZ29/2T catalyst. Pressures required for reduction of 4-heptanone maybe from 10 psi to 1600 psi. In another aspect, the reduction of 4-heptanone is done at a pressure range of 200 to 500 psi. In another aspect, the reduction of 4-heptanone is done at a temperature between 50 and 350° C. in the presence of a catalyst. In one aspect, the reaction is run at a temperature between 175 and 350° C. In one embodiment, reduction of 4-heptanone is done using hydrogen at 300 psi pressure and 300° C. or at 300 psi and 200° C.
In one embodiment, butyric acid is reacted over a solid catalyst to form 4-heptanone. In a variation, butyric is reacted over gamma-alumina to form 4-heptanone. In another variation, the solid support is doped by a metal oxide. An example of this variation is a gamma-alumina catalyst doped with lanthanum oxide. In other embodiments, butyric acid is reacted over ceria, magnesia, hydrotalcites, zeolites and the like to form 4-heptanone.
In one embodiment 4-heptanone can be converted by means of hydrogenation-dehydration step process over bifunctional Pt/Nb2O5 catalyst to linear heptanes. In another embodiment, 4-heptanol can be dehydrated using a gamma-alumina catalyst to heptene, which can reduced in the presence of palladium catalyst to form hydrocarbons. In one embodiment, branched hydrocarbons can be obtained by dehydration-isomerization of 4-heptanol over a zeolite catalyst. In another embodiment 4-heptanone can be oligomerized in the presence of Amberlyst catalyst to produce a mixture of C14 unsaturated compounds which are converted to diesel fuel and jet fuel. In one aspect of the above method, the zeolite is a ZSM-5 catalyst. In another aspect, the above method provides a mixture of linear and branched hydrocarbons.
In one embodiment, 4-heptanol is prepared by synthesizing ketene, dimerizing ketene to form diketene and hydrogenating diketene to produce butyric acid. The butyric acid is ketonized by means of ceria-zirconia catalyst to form 4-heptanone which is reduced to heptanol. In another embodiment, the formed 4-heptanol above may be dehydrated to form a hydrocarbon fuel.
In various embodiments, there is provided methods to prepare C5 and C6 alcohols and other products such as alkanes and ketones. In one embodiment ethanol is carbonylated to form propanoic acid which is dehydrated to form methylketene. Methylketene is dimerized and hydrogenated to form alcohol products. In one aspect, ethanol is converted to 2-methyl pentanol by the use of ketene and hydrogenation chemistry. Ethanol is carbonylated to form propanoic acid, the propanoic acid maybe dehydrated to form methyl ketene which is dimerized to form a methyl ketene dimer. The dimer of methyl ketene is hydrogenated to form 2-methyl pentanol. In another aspect, the alcohol product 2-methyl pentanol is dehydrated to yield a mixture of unsaturated hydrocarbons which are in turn hydrogenated to produce a mixture of hydrocarbons.
In one embodiment, ethanol is carbonylated to form propanoic acid which is ketonized to form 3-pentanone. The 3-pentanone is hydrogenated to form 3-pentanol. In one aspect, ethanol used in the process is manufactured from synthesis gas by carbonylation of methanol and hydrogenation of the resulting acetic acid to form ethanol. In another embodiment, the ethanol used in the process is made from fermentation of sugars, starches or biomass. Ethanol may also be manufactured from a cellulosic feedstock or from a petroleum feedstock.
Pressures required for hydrogenation reactions may be from 10 psia to 1600 psia. In one aspect, the reduction is done at a pressure range of 200 to 500 psi. In another aspect, the reduction is done at a temperature between 50 and 350° C. in the presence of a catalyst. In another aspect, hydrogenation is done using hydrogen at 300 psi pressure and 300° C. or at 300 psi and 200° C. In another embodiment 2-methylpentanol can be dehydrated by means of gamma-alumina catalyst to 2-methyl pentene which is reduced in the presence of a hydrogenation catalyst to form hydrocarbons.
In one embodiment, branched hydrocarbons for use as a gasoline component can be obtained by dehydration step of 2-methyl pentanol over a zeolite catalyst. In one embodiment, a method to synthesize a fuel includes the steps of carbonylation of ethanol to form propionic acid, the propionic acid is dehydrated to form methylketene, methyl ketene is dimerized to form a diketene analog. The diketene analog is further dimerized to form a tetraketene adduct, the tetraketene adduct is reduced to form C11 and C12 alcohols, the alcohols that can be dehydrated to form a fuel. In one aspect of the above process, the methyl ketene is prepared from propanoic acid. In another aspect, the propanoic acid is prepared by the carbonylation of ethanol. In one aspect of the above process, the ethanol may be obtained by a fermentation process, or by the hydrogenation of acetic acid. In another aspect, the catalyst used for the hydrogenation of (E) and (Z)-4-ethylidene-3-methyloxetan-2-one is a transition metal, or a mixture of two or more transition metals. In another aspect, the catalyst is a copper and zinc based catalyst or a copper chromite barium promoted catalyst. In another aspect of the above method, the method provides C6-7 ketones, alcohols, alkanes and mixtures thereof. In another aspect, the ratio of the ketones, alcohols and alkanes may be varied by adjusting the temperatures of the hydrogenation reaction.
In a variation, there is provided a method to prepare a fuel including the steps of carbonylating ethanol to form propanoic acid which is hydrogenated to form propanol and fed into the reaction mixture carbonylating ethanol to form a mixture of propanoic and butyric acids which are reduced to form a fuel mixture of propanol and butanol. In another aspect, ethanol is homologated with carbon monoxide and hydrogen to form propanol, propanol is homologated with carbon monoxide and hydrogen to form butanol by feeding the propanol product from the first step back into the ethanol homologation mixture resulting in a product mixture of propanol and butanol which is used as a fuel. In another embodiment butanol can be obtained by the reductive carbonylation cascade of methanol to ethanol to propanol to butanol.
In one variation, the compounds may be synthesized by the steps outlined in
The following procedures may be employed for the preparation of the compounds of the present application. The starting materials and reagents used in preparing these compounds are either available from commercial suppliers such as SigmaAldrich, Alfa Aesar, etc or are prepared by methods well known to a person of ordinary skill in the art, following procedures described in such references as Fieser and Fieser's Reagents for Organic Synthesis, vols. 1-17, John Wiley and Sons, New York, N.Y., 1991; Rodd's Chemistry of Carbon Compounds, vols. 1-5 and supps., Elsevier Science Publishers, 1989; Organic Reactions, vols. 1-40, John Wiley and Sons, New York, N.Y., 1991; March J.: Advanced Organic Chemistry, 4th ed., John Wiley and Sons, New York, N.Y.; and Larock: Comprehensive Organic Transformations, VCH Publishers, New York, 1989. Standard organic chemical reactions can be achieved by using a number of different reagents, for example, as described in Larock: Comprehensive Organic Transformations, VCH Publishers, New York, 1989.
Samples were analyzed on a Agilent 6890 5973 GCMS system equipped with a JW1 DB624 column with dimensions of 30 m×250 μ×1.4 μ. The method ran at 1 ml/min flow, with oven temperature at 40° C. for the first two minutes followed by temperature ramp at 10° C./min to a temperature of 240° C. which was held for 10 minutes. The solvent delay was set at 5 minutes. Chemical identities of compounds were confirmed by mass spectroscopic qualitative analysis on GCMS against a NIST 2011 library as well as by comparison of retention time against commercial standards. Analysis of samples with volatile alcohols was done on a Gowmac GC system using a Hayesep Q column with He and nitrogen carrier gases. Column temperature was 180° C., detector temp. was 150° C., injector temperature was 150° C., sample valve temperature was 105° C. detector current was 107 mA and injection volume was 1 microliter. Gas samples were analyzed on Varian Micro-GC instruments. Additionally, some product mixtures were analyzed for presence of lower alcohols by derivatizing the alcohol mixture by dissolving in methylene chloride, adding excess of diisopropylethylamine (DIEA), dimethylamino pyridine (DMAP) and acetyl chloride or acetic anhydride. After standing for 30 minutes the reaction mixture was analyzed by GCMS. An experiment for lower molecular weight alcohol analysis was done as follows: The liquid product (30 μl) of the reaction was dissolved in 1 ml of methylene chloride, DIEA was added with a 10 μl syringe in increments until the medium was basic, 2 mg of DMAP was added followed by acetyl chloride. The solution was allowed to stand for about a half hour until the alcohols were esterified to their acetyl derivatives. The resulting mixture was analyzed on the GCMS giving a mixture with ethyl acetate, isopropyl acetate, butyl acetate and sec-butyl acetate. These values represented the approximate percentages of ethyl, isopropyl, butyl alcohols in a sample.
Some tables below show a theoretical estimate of calorific values of a mixture shown. Analysis used calorific values published in literature available on the NIST website at www.nist.gov. For calorific values of molecules like 2-heptanol and 4-heptanol that were not readily available (an isomer's heat of combustion) like the 1-heptanol isomer's calorific value was used in calculations. The quality of GCMS NIST library matches are listed on the last column of tables. Apparatus used for hydrogenation reactions was fabricated in house using standard pipes and parts and instruments available from companies such as Swagelok, Omega engineering, etc. Glassware was purchased commercially or fabricated.
Diketene is manufactured on an industrial scale by the dehydration of acetic acid to ketene. It can be synthesized from various other starting materials including acetic anhydride, acetone, acetyl halides, etc. Ketene was generated by thermal decomposition of acetone and dimerized to diketene at low temperature. DHAA is manufactured on commercial scale from diketene and is commercially available.
Experiment 1: Synthesis of diketene: The reactor system (
The bubbler and three glass cylinder traps were charged with 300 ml of dry acetone (99.5%) each and the traps were immersed in a dry ice/acetone bath at a temperature of minus 72° C. The fourth glass trap was charged with 150 ml of acetone at room temperature. The condenser was connected to circulating cold water (8-12° C.) from a separate water/ice bath. The furnace temperature was set to 620° C. and argon was passed through the bubbler with acetone at a flow rate 0.7-1.0 l/min to deliver acetone vapour to the quartz tube reactor. Temperature of acetone in the bubbler was maintained by a water bath at about 40° C. The furnace temperature was kept at range of 620-670° C. to maintain temperature of the silica foam disk in the reactor at 470-510° C. After 4 hours of the continuous passing of acetone stream vapour through the quartz reactor the furnace was turned off and the argon flow was reduced to 0.1 l/min. When the quartz tube reached room temperature the argon flow was stopped and the reactor system including three glass cylinder traps immersed in a dry ice/acetone bath was left to stand overnight. The acetone solutions from the three traps were collected and the solvent was evaporated under vacuum at a temperature range of 25-30° C. The resulting dark red concentrate was distilled under vacuum at 55-70° C. using a cold finger (cooled with acetone/dry ice) and the formed white solid was melted into a separate flask to give a yellowish liquid weighing 16.5 g, including 75% of diketene, 16% of acetic anhydride and 5% of acetic acid. The diketene was taken forward into the next step without further purification.
Reduction of Diketene:Experiment 2: Reduction of diketene 62 hour (batch reactor): The reduction reaction was performed in a hydrogenation reactor consisting of a ½″ diameter stainless steel tube fitted with a ball valve at the bottom and a cross (Swagelok parts) on the top. A thermocouple (top arm), side arms bearing a pressure gauge and pressure relief valve and a ball valve were attached to three arms of the cross and the fourth (bottom) arm was attached to the top of the stainless steel tube. The tube was wrapped with heating rope and insulation was wrapped around the heating rope. The ball valve on the bottom of the reactor is connected to a 3″ length of ⅛″ tube immersed in a cold water bath is connected to a 1/16″ tube bearing a ball valve and needle valve to collect liquid samples from the reactor.
Procedure: 10.5 g of copper/zinc catalyst CZ 29/2T (Johnson Matthey) was weighed and loaded into the hydrogenation reactor. A 5% hydrogen in argon mixture was passed over the catalyst bed at 0.8 lit/min at a temperature of 180° C. for about 18 hours to reduce the catalyst. The heating was shut off and the catalyst allowed to cool. The catalyst was removed from the reactor under an argon atmosphere in a glove bag and placed in a porcelain dish and 0.7 ml of diketene was added dropwise to the catalyst pellets. The wetted catalyst pellets were poured back into the reactor, the reactor was sealed, removed from the glove bag and purged with argon and hydrogen three times each and then hydrogen filled to a pressure of about 1100 psi. Heating was started and temperature of the catalyst bed was about 209° C. The hydrogenation was continued for about 62 hours after which the reactor was cooled and a sample of liquid collected from the reactor bottom. GCMS analysis of the sample showed the formation of higher alcohols including 1-butanol, 2-butanol, 2-pentanol, hexanol isomers, methyl cyclohexanol, heptanol isomers, etc in the reaction. GCMS qualitative analysis of higher alcohols formed is shown in Table 1 also presents a theoretical estimation of the calorific value of a mixture. Besides the major alcohol peaks in the GCMS, peaks were also observed indicating formation of esters, hydrocarbons and other oxygenated carbon compounds.
Experiment 3: Diketene reduction 1 day: 10 g of copper/zinc catalyst pellets CZ29/2T (Johnson Matthey) was loaded into a stainless steel tube, fixed bed hydrogenation reactor (described above) and reduced overnight in a stream of 5:95 hydrogen:argon at 180° C. After 18 hours the catalyst was cooled to room temperature and poured into a flat porcelain dish in a glove bag under argon. 1 gm of diketene was added dropwise to the catalyst pellets to wet them as evenly as possible. The reactor was resealed, removed from the glovebag, purged thrice with argon, twice with hydrogen and then filled with hydrogen to 1100 psi. Temperature was raised to 67° C. and allowed to stand for 4 hours. A gas sample was taken for CO2 and CO analysis indicating 2.55% CO and 0.5% CO2. Heating was shut off and the reactor was allowed to stand at room temperature overnight. Next morning, heating was resumed and temperature was raised to 210° C. The reaction absorbed hydrogen with pressure dropping from 1200 psi to 940 psi so hydrogen was filled as required to keep pressure in the range of 1045 to 1240 psi. After 4.5 hours of heating at 210° C. a liquid sample was taken by cooling the sampling port with ice water bath and the heating was shut off. GCMS qualitative analysis of higher alcohols formed is shown in Table 2 and also presents a theoretical estimation of the calorific value of a mixture. Mixture of products indicated complete conversion of diketene, 48% by area of higher alcohols formed of which 9.4% were 1-butanol and 2-butanol combined.
Experiment 4: Diketene reduction 30 minutes: 8.44 g of a copper-zinc oxide based catalyst Pricat CZ29/2T (Johnson Matthey) was placed in the hydrogenation reactor and purged with argon thrice followed by a stream of 5% H2/argon at 1 l/min overnight. The temperature of the reactor (catalyst bed) was in the 170 to 210° C. range during the reduction. The 5% hydrogen in argon was replaced by a stream of pure hydrogen at 0.4 l/min at a temperature of 160 to 180° C. for 40 minutes. Heating was stopped and the reactor cooled down with the 5% hydrogen stream. The reactor was placed in a glove bag under argon and catalyst removed and carefully wetted dropwise with 1 ml of diketene. The catalyst wetted with the diketene was then placed back in the reactor and the reactor sealed, removed from the glove bag and purged thrice with argon. Hydrogen pressure was set to 1100 psi and heating was started. The temperature rose rapidly from room temperature to around 188° C. as hydrogen was absorbed by the reaction. Heating was switched off about 30 minutes after temperature was reached. The pressure was between 1180 to 930 psi. The reactor vapors were condensed into a liquid using an ice water bath, collected and sampled on the GCMS. GCMS analysis of the sample showed the formation of higher alcohols including 1-butanol, 2-butanol, 2-pentanol, hexanols, heptanols and methyl cyclohexanol, etc in the reaction. GCMS qualitative analysis of higher alcohols formed is shown in Table 3, also presents a theoretical estimation of the calorific value of a mixture. Besides the major alcohol peaks in the GCMS, peaks were also observed indicating formation of esters, hydrocarbons and other oxygenated carbon compounds. GCMS qualitative analysis of higher alcohols formed is shown in Table 3 and also presents a theoretical estimation of the calorific value of a mixture. Complete conversion of diketene was observed, 44% of higher alcohols of which 1-butanol and 2-butanol were 9%.
Experiment 5: Diketene reductions in continuous flow reactor system on a copper-zinc catalyst: The hydrogenation was performed in a steel tube reactor (see
Procedure: 6.5 g of the CuO—ZnO catalyst (Unicat, LS-402, 5×2 mm) was placed in the reactor and covered on top with 1.0 g glass beads. The reactor was purged with nitrogen followed by a stream of 5% H2/nitrogen at 0.4 l/min overnight with temperature of the reactor 190 -195° C. and then 5% H2/nitrogen was replaced by a stream of pure hydrogen at 0.4 l/min at 195° C. for 1 h. The reactor was initially heated to 210° C., hydrogen pressure was set up to 300 psi at hydrogen flow rate of 0.3 l/min and HPLC pump was turned on to pump diketene (GC: 95.1% diketene, 3.5% acetic acid, 0.7% acetic anhydride) at a rate of 0.05 ml/min. The experiment was run for 2.3 h at temperature gradient from 210 to 230° C. (catalyst temp at middle of the reactor) and samples of the reaction mixture were collected for GS-MS analysis (in methyl acetate). GC analysis for volatile products on a Gowmac GC against quantitative standards showed samples S3, S5, S8 contained about 31 to 32% isopropanol and about 4% ethanol each by volume. GCMS qualitative analysis of products formed is shown in Table 4, also an estimation of the calorific value of a sample mixture 2 (S2) based on the GCMS chromatogram is shown in Table 4a.
Samples showed over 99% of diketene was reacted, included 69-83% higher alcohols, of which 58-73% was 1-butanol and 2-butanol. The product mixture was also observed to contain esters and a ketone which combined with the alcohols was 82-94% of product.
Experiment 6: Diketene reductions in continuous flow reactor system on a nickel-alumina catalyst: 5.3 g of the NiO—Al2O3 catalyst (Unicat, NH-100, extruded) was placed in the reactor described in experiment 5 above and covered on top with 1.3 g glass beads. The reactor was purged with nitrogen followed by a stream of 5% H2/nitrogen at 0.4 l/min overnight at temperature of the reactor at 190° C. and then 5% H2/nitrogen was replaced by a stream of pure hydrogen at 0.4 l/min at 190-195° C. for 2 h. The reactor was initially heated to 193° C., hydrogen pressure was set up to 300 psi at hydrogen flow rate of 0.3 l/min and HPLC pump was turned on to pump diketene (GC: 95.1% diketene, 3.5% acetic acid, 0.7% acetic anhydride) at a rate of 0.05 ml/min. The experiment was run for 1.5 h at temperature gradient from 195 to 240° C. (catalyst temp at middle of the reactor) and samples of the reaction mixture were collected and analyzed by GC-MS analysis (in methyl acetate). GCMS qualitative analysis of products formed is shown in Table 5 and also a theoretical estimation of the calorific value of a sample mixture 3 (S3) is shown in Table 5a. 100% of diketene was reacted with product showing 41-51% higher alcohols of which 35-43% was 1-butanol and 2-butanol. The mixture was observed to also contain other products including butyrate esters, acetic acid which along with higher alcohols were about 88%.
Experiment 7: Diketene reductions in continuous flow reactor system on a Cu—Zn and nickel-alumina catalyst: First 5.1 g of the CuO—ZnO catalyst (Unicat, LS-402, 5×2 mm) and then 1.97 g of the NiO—Al2O3 catalyst (Unicat, NH-100, extruded) was placed in the reactor described in experiment 5 above covered on top with 1.4 g glass beads were placed in the reactor. The reactor was purged with nitrogen followed by a stream of 5% H2/nitrogen at 0.4 l/min overnight at temperature of the reactor at 230-240° C. and then 5% H2/nitrogen was replaced by a stream of pure hydrogen at 0.4 l/min at 210° C. for 2 h. The reactor was initially heated to 212° C., hydrogen pressure was set up to 300 psi at hydrogen flow rate of 0.3 l/min and HPLC pump was turned on to pump diketene (GC: 91.6% diketene, 2.9% acetic acid, 3.9% acetic anhydride) at a rate of 0.05 ml/min. The experiment was run for 1.7 h at temperature gradient from 190 to 220° C. (catalyst temp at middle of the reactor) and samples of the reaction mixture were collected and analyzed by GC-MS analysis (in methyl acetate). GCMS qualitative analysis of products formed is shown in Table 6 and also a theoretical estimation of the calorific value of a sample mixture 5 (S5) is shown in Table 6a. 100% of diketene was reacted, samples showed 91-96% of product included a mixture of higher alcohols, butyrate esters and acetic acid, higher alcohols were in 34-77% range of which 33-77% was 1-butanol and 2-butanol.
Experiment 8: Hydrogenation of beta-butyrolactone (BBL) with a Cu—Cr catalyst in a batch reactor: The reduction reaction was performed in a hydrogenation reactor consisting of a ½ ″diameter stainless steel tube fitted with a ball valve at the bottom and a cross on the top. A thermocouple, side arm bearing a pressure gauge and pressure relief valve and a ball valve were attached to three arms of the cross and the third arm was attached to the top of the stainless steel tube. The tube was wrapped with heating rope and insulation was wrapped around the heating rope. The ball valve on the bottom of the reactor is connected to a 3″ length of ⅛″ tube immersed in a cold water bath which is connected to a 1/16″ tube bearing a ball valve and needle valve to collect liquid samples from the reactor. Procedure: 15.3 g of the barium promoted copper chromite catalyst (Stream Chemicals, (62-64% Cr2CuO4, 22-24% CuO, 6% BaO) was placed in the hydrogenation reactor and purged with nitrogen followed by a stream of 5% H2/nitrogen at 0.2 l/min overnight at temperature of the reactor 180° C. The 5% H2/nitrogen was replaced by a stream of pure hydrogen at 0.2 l/min for 1 h. The hydrogen stream was replaced with nitrogen and the reactor was cooled down to room temperature and under continuous nitrogen flow 0.50 ml of BBL was injected into the catalyst bed. The reactor was washed 3 times with hydrogen and then filled with hydrogen to a pressure of 600 psi. Heating was started and temperature of the catalyst bed was maintained at 180-190° C. and hydrogen pressure at 500-700 psi for 3 h. The reactor was cooled down to room temperature, washed with nitrogen and the catalyst was removed and washed with 2 ml of methyl acetate. The wash was filtered and directly analyzed by GC-MS. Similar experiments were performed using CuO/ZnO, Ni/alumina and Ru/alumina catalysts. The obtained results are summarized in Table 7.
Experiment 9: Hydrogenation of BBL with a Ni-alumina catalyst: Continuous flow reactor setup: The reduction reaction was performed in a steel tube reactor (made from Swagelok parts) consisting of a ½″ diameter stainless steel tube fitted with a ball valve at the bottom and a ¼″ union stainless steel cross on the top. A thermocouple was attached to the top arm of the cross with one of the (cross) side arms bearing a pressure gauge, pressure relief valve and a ball valve. The other side arm of the ¼″ union cross was connected to a 1/16″ tube which was attached to a Gilson 307 HPLC pump. The 1/16″ tube entered the reactor and extended down till it was just above the catalyst bed. The bottom arm of the cross was attached to the top of the ½″ stainless steel tube. The tube was wrapped with heating rope and insulation was wrapped around the heating rope. Another thermocouple was placed under the heating rope. Both the thermocouples were connected to a digital display. The ball valve on the bottom of the reactor is connected to a coil of ⅛″ stainless steel tube that was connected to 2″ length of ¼ inch tube with a drain at its bottom for liquid condensate and a vent near its top that carried out non-condensing gases. This coiled tube and lower portion are cooled with ice water and served as a trap to collect liquid. The end of the gas vent had a ball valve and the liquid collecting end had a needle valve so that it could be opened slowly to collect liquid samples. Procedure: 7.0 g of the NiO/alumina catalyst (Unicat, 50% NiO/Al2O3) was placed in the reactor and covered on top with 0.9 g glass beads. The reactor was purged with nitrogen followed by a stream of 5% H2/nitrogen at 0.3 l/min overnight at temperature of the reactor 180° C. and then 5% H2/nitrogen was replaced by a stream of pure hydrogen at 0.3 l/min for 1 h. The reactor was initially heated to 260° C., hydrogen pressure was set up to 300 psi at hydrogen flow rate of 0.40 l/min, HPLC pump was turned on and BBL was pumped at a rate of 0.04 ml/min The experiment was run for 6 h at temperature gradient from 260 to 170° C. and samples of the reaction mixture were collected and analyzed by GC-MS analysis (in methyl acetate). The obtained results are summarized in the Table 8.
Experiment 10: Hydrogenation of BBL with a Ni-alumina catalyst at around 250° C.: 9.5 g of the NiO/alumina catalyst (Unicat, 50% NiO/Al2O3) was placed in the reactor described in experiment above and covered on top with 1.2 g glass beads. The reactor was purged with nitrogen followed by a stream of 5% H2/nitrogen at 0.3 l/min overnight at temperature of the reactor 180° C. and then 5% H2/nitrogen was replaced by a stream of pure hydrogen at 0.3 l/min for 1 h. The reactor was initially heated to 250° C., hydrogen pressure was set up to 400 psi at hydrogen flow rate of 0.40 l/min, HPLC pump was turned on and BBL was pumped at a rate of 0.03-0.04 ml/min The experiment was run for 6.7 h at temperature gradient from 250 to 180° C. and samples of the reaction mixture were collected and analyzed by GC-MS analysis (in methyl acetate). The obtained results are summarized in the Table 9.
Experiment 11: Hydrogenation of BBL with a Ni-alumina catalyst as temperature was varied: 7.25 g of the NiO/alumina catalyst (Unicat, 50% NiO/Al2O3) was placed in the reactor and covered on top with 2.5 g glass beads. The reactor was purged with nitrogen followed by a stream of 5% H2/nitrogen at 0.3 l/min overnight at temperature of the reactor 180° C. and then 5% H2/nitrogen was replaced by a stream of pure hydrogen at 0.3 l/min for 1 h. The reactor was initially heated to 220° C., hydrogen pressure was set up to 300 psi at hydrogen flow rate of 0.40 l/min, HPLC pump was turned on and BBL was pumped at a rate of 0.05 ml/min. The experiment was run for 6.5 h at temperature gradient from 220 to 200° to 240° C. and samples of the reaction mixture were collected and analyzed by GC-MS analysis (in methyl acetate). The obtained results are summarized in the Table 10.
%—GCMS area percent; the peak related to the solvent component, ethyl acetate was excluded.
Experiment 12: Hydrogenation of MAA with a copper-zinc catalyst; Continuous flow reactor set up: The reduction reaction was performed in a hydrogenation reactor (made from Swagelok parts using the required unions, port connectors, reducers and valves as needed) consisting of a 1″ diameter stainless steel tube reactor chamber that held catalyst. The reactor tube was wrapped in heat tape and insulation surrounded the heating tape. Five thermocouples were affixed to the reactor to monitor catalyst bed temperatures along the length of the reactor catalyst bed. The thermocouples were connected to a digital display. The top of the reactor was connected to a T-union one side arm of the union was connected to a 1/16″ tube that was connected to a waters HPLC pump. The intake of the pump was dipped in MAA contained in a 50 ml measuring cylinder. The other arm of the T-union on the top of the reactor was connected to a pressure transducer, hydrogen supply and a differential pressure gauge to adjust pressure and flow rate. The bottom end of the reactor was connected to a liquid condenser cooled by circulating ice water by a ¼″ stainless steel tube. The condenser had a ball valve at its bottom to open and collect liquid samples. The gas outlet of the condenser was connected to a back pressure gauge that enabled control of reactor pressure which was in turn connected to a flow meter that vented reactor gases to the hood via a tube. Procedure: 95 g of copper/zinc oxide catalyst from Unicat (LS-402) was loaded into the reactor and reduced overnight at 180 to 190° C. over a stream of 5% hydrogen 95% nitrogen flowing at about 500 ml/min. Next morning, the nitrogen/hydrogen mixture was replaced by hydrogen and reduction continued for another 2 hours. Hydrogen flow rate was set to around 500 ml/min and the catalyst bed temperatures were at 200, 261 and 251° C. for up, middle and bottom reactor zones respectively. 50 ml of MAA (purchased from Alfa Aesar) was poured into the HPLC pump reservoir, the pump purged for air bubbles and flow commenced onto the reactor catalyst bed at 0.7 ml/min. Liquid sample was taken after about 30 minutes had passed and taken at about 10 minute intervals. GCMS of the samples (Table 1) indicated 2-butanol and 1-butanol as major products. Samples were analyzed for lower boiling solvents on a Gowmac GC system indicating ethanol, acetone, isopropanol, 1-propanol, 2-butanol and 1-butanol were in ratios of 7.7: 0.6:18.9:0.7:45.1:26.9, respectively. The obtained results are summarized in the Table 11. 100% MAA was converted. 84-91% of products included higher alcohols and smaller amounts of methyl butyrate, 82-89% was higher alcohols of which 71-79% was 1-butanol and 2-butanol.
Experiment 13: Hydrogenation of MAA with a copper-zinc catalyst as temperature was varied: To the reduced catalyst bed used in the experiment above heated to temperature range of 193 to 218° C., MAA was added via the HPLC pump at 0.7 ml/min. Liquid sample was collected after 18 minutes after the start of the pump and samples were analyzed on GCMS. Temperature of the reactor rose after initial liquid input and was controlled by decreasing heating from the heat tape. The top of the reactor was cooled to around 115° C. and the bottom zone had a temperature of around 245° C. The obtained results of GCMS qualitative analysis are summarized in the Table 12. 100% of MAA was reacted. 84-89% of product included higher alcohols and methyl butyrate of which 79-86% was higher alcohols and 74-80% are 1-butanol and 2-butanol.
Experiment 14: Hydrogenation of MAA with a copper-zinc catalyst as temperature was varied near 200° C. 11.9 g of the CuO—ZnO catalyst (Unicat, LS-402, 5×2 mm) was placed in the reactor and covered on top with 1.9 g glass beads. The reactor was purged with nitrogen followed by a stream of 5% H2/nitrogen at 0.4 l/min overnight at temperature of the reactor at 150° C. and then 5% H2/nitrogen was replaced by a stream of pure hydrogen at 0.4 l/min at 200° C. for 2 h. The reactor was initially heated to 204° C., hydrogen pressure was set up to 300 psi at hydrogen flow rate of 0.4 l/min and HPLC pump was turned on to pump MAA (Alfa-Aesar, 99%) at a rate of 0.1 ml/min The experiment was run for 3.2 h at temperature gradient from 190 to 200° C. and samples of the reaction mixture were collected for GS-MS analysis. GCMS qualitative analysis of higher alcohols formed is shown in Table 13 and also a theoretical estimation of the calorific value of a sample mixture 8 (S8) is shown in Table 13a. 100% of MAA was reacted. 81-89% of the product showed higher alcohols, ketones and butyric acid esters. 64-71% was higher alcohols of which 51-60% was 1-butanol and 2-butanol.
Experiment 15: Hydrogenation of DHAA in dioxane solvent with a Ru-alumina catalyst: Batch reactor system setup: The reduction reaction was performed in a hydrogenation reactor (made from Swagelok parts) consisting of a ½″ diameter stainless steel tube fitted with a ball valve at the bottom and a cross on the top. A thermocouple attached to the top arm, the side arms bearing a pressure gauge and pressure relief valve and a ball valve were attached to three arms of the cross and the bottom arm was attached to the top of the stainless steel tube. The tube was wrapped with heating rope and insulation was wrapped around the heating rope. The ball valve on the bottom of the reactor is connected to a ⅛″ stainless steel tube that had provision for cooling and collecting liquid samples that could be collected via a ball valve connected to a needle valve.
0.41 g of DHAA was dissolved in 1.5 mL of hot dioxane (99.8%) and the resulting homogenic solution was immediately pipetted evenly over 4.62 g of 2% Ru-alumina catalyst pellets (Alfa-Aesar). The resulting wetted catalyst was left to air for 30 minutes and then was poured into the reactor. The reactor was sealed and purged with argon and hydrogen three times each and then hydrogen was filled to a pressure of 1010 psi. Heating was started and temperature of the catalyst bed was maintained at about 200° C. (180-207° C.) for 2.5 hours. After 0.5 h the pressure in the reactor was dropped to 720 psi and was refilled with hydrogen to 1080 psi and it was 920 psi in the end of hydrogenation. The reactor was cooled down and a sample of liquid was collected from the reactor bottom and analyzed by GC/MS. The analysis indicated formation of compounds described in Table 1 below. Tables show an analysis of products using calorific values published from literature available on the National Institute of Standards and Technology website at nist.gov. For calorific values of molecules like 2-heptanol and 4-heptanol that were not readily available an isomer's heat of combustion like the 1-heptanol isomer's calorific value was used in calculations. The GCMS peaks were matched by agilent GCMS software to the NIST 2011 library of MS spectra. The quality of matches are listed on the last column of the table. The average energy of a fuel produced from the selected products of an experiment is on the last line of the tables. GCMS qualitative analysis of higher alcohols formed is shown in Table 14 and also presents a theoretical estimation of the calorific value of a mixture. 100% of DHAA was reacted. 33% of product observed was higher alcohols and some ketones. 18% higher alcohols were formed of which 16% was heptanols.
Experiment 16: Hydrogenation of DHAA with a Ru-alumina catalyst: In the stainless steel inset was put 3.20 g of 2% Ru-alumina catalyst (Afa-Aesar) and 0.51 g of DHAA and the inset was placed inside of the reactor. The reactor was sealed and purged with argon and hydrogen three times each and then hydrogen filled to a pressure of 1100 psi. Heating was started and temperature of the catalyst bed was maintained at 200-220° C. for 3.3 hours. The pressure drop related to hydrogen consumption was observed and in the end of hydrogenation it was 900 psi. The reactor was cooled down, purged with argon, the inset was removed and the catalyst was washed with 5 mL of methyl acetate. The resulting wash was filtered and analyzed by GC/MS. GCMS qualitative analysis of products formed is shown in Table 15 and also presents a theoretical estimation of the calorific value of a mixture. 100% DHAA reacted. 41% was a mixture of higher alcohols and ketones of which 27.7% was higher alcohols and 23.4% of that was heptanols.
Experiment 17: Hydrogenation of DHAA in dioxane over a copper-zinc catalyst: 8.5 g of Copper zinc catalyst tablets were loaded into the steel tube hydrogenation reactor. A stream of 5% hydrogen/95% argon was passed over the catalyst at 0.5 lit/min as the catalyst was heated at 175° C. After reducing for about 18 hours overnight, the reactor was cooled and the catalyst was poured into a porcelain dish at room temperature under an argon atmosphere in a glove bag. 600 mg of DHAA was suspended in 1.2 ml of dioxane and heated with a heat gun. The hot dioxane was immediately added to the catalyst beads to wet the beads, the DHAA began to fall out of solution as the catalyst cooled. The catalyst beads were poured back into the hydrogenation reactor and it was sealed and removed from the glove bag. The reactor was then purged thrice with argon, twice with hydrogen and then filled to 1000 psi. The reactor was heated with the temperature rising to 210° C. Hydrogen was refilled as it was absorbed by the reaction and pressure varied between 900 and 1220 psi. After 2.5 hours an ice bath was placed to cool the liquid sampling tube, heating switched off and a liquid sample collected. GCMS of the sample indicated peaks for 4-heptanone, 4-heptanol, 2-heptanol and 1-butanol in a ratio of 14.2:71.4:12.6:1.5 respectively. Other products like 2,6-dimethyl-4-heptanol, n-heptane and 2,6-dimethylheptane were observed as lesser products.
All DHAA starting material was consumed. GCMS qualitative analysis of higher alcohols formed is shown in Table 16 and also presents a theoretical estimation of the calorific value of a mixture. 27% of products included higher alcohols, ketone and alkane products. 23% was higher alcohols of which 21% was heptanols.
Experiment 18: Hydrogenation of DHAA over Cu—Cr for 3 hours: 13 g of a copper chromite barium promoted catalyst containing about 62-64% Cr2CuO4, 22-24% CuO, 6% BaO, 0-4% Graphite, 1% CrO3, was weighed and added to the hydrogenation reactor described above. The reactor was sealed and a mixture of 5% hydrogen/95% nitrogen mixture was passed over the catalyst for about 18 hours at a temperature range of 155 to 180° C. The nitrogen/hydrogen gas mixture was replaced by a hydrogen gas stream and reduction was continued for another one hour at 180° C. The heating was shut off and system allowed to cool to room temperature. 0.5 g of DHAA was suspended in 1.5 ml of methanol and 1.5 ml of isopropanol and warmed gently with a heat gun until a clear solution was formed. The solution was quickly added to the catalyst bed and the reactor was sealed up. The reactor was pressurized with hydrogen at 1100 psi and was heated. Temperature rose to 271° C. and the pressure rose to 1170 psi. Heating was decreased and temperature fell to 224° C. H2 pressure dropped to 970 psi over about one and half hour and was refilled to 1140 psi. After running for 3 hours the sampling tube was cooled, sample was taken and heating was shut off. GCMS of the sample indicated formation of 4-heptanol and n-heptane as major products in a ratio of 18.8:16.7 area percents respectively. Other alcohols such as 2-butanol, 1-butanol, 2-pentanol, etc and alkanes such as 3-methyl heptanes, 2,6-dimethyl heptanes, etc were observed in lesser amounts. All starting material was consumed. GCMS qualitative analysis of higher alcohols formed is shown in Table 17 and also presents a theoretical estimation of the calorific value of a mixture. 100% of DHAA was reacted. 63% of product mixture was observed to contain higher alcohols and alkanes. 32% were higher alcohols of which 17% was heptanols.
Continuous flow Reactions. Reaction systems used (shown in
Experiment 19: Hydrogenation of DHAA over a copper chromite catalyst: The hydrogenation reactor was filled with 297 g of copper chromite barium hydroxide catalyst and reduced with 5% hydrogen 95% nitrogen overnight at 195° C. The reduction was continued by replacing the hydrogen/argon mixture with hydrogen for another two hours to ensure proper reduction. The reactor was heated to about 350° C. at the mid section of the reactor and hydrogen and DHAA flow started. Table 18 below describes some temperatures, pressure and flow rates for the reaction. Seven samples collected weighing 151 g. Total DHAA feed was 297 g. Reaction parameters and products seen in GCMS are shown in Tables 18 and 19 respectively. 100% of DHAA was hydrogenated. 53% of product was observed to contain higher alcohols, alkanes and ketones. 30% was hydrocarbons, 9% was higher alcohols of which 6% was heptanols. Samples were collected and analyzed by GCMS. Table 20 below describes compounds seen in the GCMS qualitative analysis and gives an estimation of the calorific value of a product sample of the reaction.
Calorific values of samples collected are S2-41.5 MJ/kg, S3-9.8 MJ/KG, S5-33.9 MJ/KG, S6-32.6 MJ/KG.
52.7% of sample is shown here
Experiment 20: Hydrogenation of DHAA over a copper zinc catalyst: The reactor was filled with 544 g of copper zinc catalyst and reduced with 5% hydrogen 95% nitrogen overnight at 195° C. The reduction was continued by replacing the hydrogen/argon mixture with hydrogen for another two hours to ensure proper reduction. The reactor was heated to about 247° C. at the mid section of the reactor and hydrogen and DHAA flow started. Table 21 below describes some temperatures, pressure and flow rates for the reaction. Total product collected was 182 g. Samples were collected and analyzed by GCMS. Reaction parameters and products seen in GCMS are shown in Tables 21 and 22 respectively. Table 23 below describes compounds seen in the GCMS qualitative analysis and gives an estimation of the calorific value of a product sample of the reaction. 100% of DHAA was hydrogenated. 73% of product was observed to contain higher alcohols, alkanes and ketone products, 14% was higher alcohols.
Experimental calorific values of samples run gave S4 34.2 MJ/Kg, S8 34.5 MJ/Kg, S11 34.5 MJ/Kg.
73.1% of sample is shown here
Experiment 21: Hydrogenation of DHAA over a copper zinc catalyst at lower DHAA flow rates: The reactor was filled with 580 g of copper zinc catalyst and reduced with 5% hydrogen 95% nitrogen overnight at 195° C. The reduction was continued by replacing the hydrogen/argon mixture with hydrogen for another two hours to ensure proper reduction. The reactor was heated to about 300° C. at the mid section of the reactor and hydrogen and DHAA flow started. Table 24 below describes some temperatures, pressure and flow rates for the reaction. 301 g of DHAA was reacted. Sixteen liquid samples were collected over the reaction amounting to 117 g of product collected. Samples were collected and analyzed by GCMS. Reaction parameters and products seen in GCMS are shown in Tables 24 and 25 respectively and graph 1 below. Table 26 below describes compounds seen in the GCMS qualitative analysis and gives an estimation of the calorific value of a product sample of the reaction. 100% of DHAA was converted. 75% of product included hydrocarbons and 2% of 4-nonanol. Graph 1 shows composition change of the mixture of the formed products with time and temperature.
Experiment 22: Ketonization of butyric acid over gamma-alumina in a continuous flow reactor: Ketonization and Hydrogenation Reactor system setup: The ketonization reaction was performed in a steel tube reactor (made from Swagelok parts) consisting of a ½″ diameter stainless steel tube fitted with a ball valve at the bottom and a ¼″ union stainless steel cross on the top. A thermocouple was attached to the top arm of the cross with one of the (cross) side arms bearing a pressure gauge, pressure relief valve and a ball valve. The other side arm of the ¼″ union cross was connected to a 1/16″ tube which was attached to a Gilson 307 HPLC pump. The 1/16″ tube entered the reactor and extended down till it was just above the catalyst bed. The bottom arm of the cross was attached to the top of the ½″ stainless steel tube. The tube was wrapped with heating rope and insulation was wrapped around the heating rope. Another thermocouple was placed under the heating rope. Both the thermocouples were connected to a digital display. The ball valve on the bottom of the reactor is connected to a coil of ⅛″ stainless steel tube that was connected to 2″ length of ¼ inch tube with a drain at its bottom for liquid condensate and a vent near its top that carried out non-condensing gases. This coiled tube and lower portion are cooled with ice water and served as a trap to collect liquid. The end of the gas vent had a ball valve and the liquid collecting end had a needle valve so that it could be opened slowly to collect liquid samples.
4.1 g of gamma-alumina was loaded into the reactor and three different runs were done for the ketonization.
Run a) The reactor was heated to 350° C. The HPLC pump was turned on and butyric acid was pumped at a rate of 0.25 ml/min. After the reaction had run for 15 minutes liquid samples were drawn. GCMS of the samples indicated formation of 6.5% 4-heptanone with 80% butyric acid remaining indicating a conversion of about 7.5% by GCMS.
Run b) The experiment was run with the flow rate of butyric acid decreased to 0.1 ml/min from 0.25 ml/min with temperature raised to 420 to 460° C. GCMS samples indicated 49% heptanone and 40% butyric acid indicating a conversion of about 55%.
Run c) The experiment was run with a flow rate of 0.05 ml/min, the temperatures ranged from 410 to 460° C. Samples of the reaction were collected. GCMS analysis of the product indicated 72.5% 4-heptanone was formed and 5.4% butyric remained indicating a conversion of about 93%.
Results are summarized in the Table 26 below:
Reduction of 4-heptanone to 4-heptanol:
Experiment 23: Reduction of 4-Heptanone to 4-heptanol over a copper-zinc catalyst in a continuous flow reactor: The reduction reaction was performed in a hydrogenation reactor (
Procedure: The reactor tube was filled with about 13 g of zinc copper oxide catalyst (Unicat MTS401) and the catalyst reduced in 95:5 N2/hydrogen stream at 0.2 liters/min overnight at a temperature of 180° C. The N2/hydrogen mixture was replaced by a hydrogen line and reduction continued for another hour and then stopped. The reactor pressure was set to 300 psi hydrogen with temperature at 175° C. Hydrogen flow was at 400 cc/min and the HPLC pump was started, pumping 4-heptanone at a rate of 0.2 ml/min Reaction was continued for about 90 minutes at this flow rate as samples were taken and analyzed by GCMS indicating 83.7% heptanol and 9.2% heptanone remaining (˜90% conversion by GCMS). Flow rate of 4-heptanone was lowered to 0.15 ml/min as temperature, reactor pressure and hydrogen flow rate were in the range of 180-190° C., 300 psi and 400 cc/min respectively. GCMS at the lower flow rate indicated 77.8% 4-heptanol and 5.3% heptanone which is about 93% conversion by GC. A total of 22 grams of 4-heptanone were pumped through the reactor and 20 g of liquid product mixture was collected.
Experiment 24: Synthesis of Hydrocarbons from butyric acid on larger scale-reactor setup: A reaction system (shown in
Reactions were run as butyric acid was fed into R1 at 1 ml/min and after ketonization occurred the output of R1 was fed along with hydrogen flow rates at 4 SLPM through R2. Reactor pressure was at around 300 psi and temperature was raised. Samples of the reaction were drawn and analyzed by GCMS.
Five experiments were run with typically more than 25 samples for each run. Thus more than 125 samples were taken. For instance, data from run 3 was charted in graph 2 below showing product composition of samples as the temperature changed and experiment progressed over time. Table 28 shows an example of deeper analysis of data points from graph 4 for sample 30 taken at around 15:14 on the x-axis. GCMS qualitative analysis shows the important compounds found in sample 30 listed along with their percentage. 100% of starting materials were converted. Product mixture shows above 95% hydrocarbons of which 72.5% is heptane and minor ketone products. Table 29 lists experimental calorific values of samples from different runs.
Table 30 shows a theoretical energy calculation for the same sample 30 based on GCMS qualitative analysis. The table shows distribution of classes of compounds in the sample such as alcohols (such as 1-butanol, 4-heptanol, etc), ketones (such as 4-heptanone), alkanes (such as heptane, nonane, etc).
Experiment 25: Lab scale synthesis of Methyl Ketene: The reactor system (
Experiment 26: Hydrogenation of methylketene dimer and trimer over a copper-zinc catalyst: The reduction reaction was performed in a hydrogenation reactor (
Procedure: The reactor tube was filled with 8.9 g of copper zinc oxide catalyst (Unicat MTS401) and the catalyst was reduced in 95:5 N2/hydrogen stream at 0.2 liters/min at a temperature of 160° C. for 18 h. The N2/hydrogen mixture was replaced by a hydrogen line and reduction was continued for another hour at 0.4 liters/min at 200° C. Then the reactor pressure was set to 300 psi hydrogen with temperature at 183° C. and hydrogen flow at 400 cc/min The HPLC pump was turned on and the Mixture A (from the methyl ketene reaction above) was pumped into the reactor at rate of 0.05 ml/min. After 30 min hydrogen flow rate was increased to 660 cc/min and temperature of the reactor to 211° C. and the liquid samples were collected. GCMS analysis for product taken over duration of reaction indicated formation of 2-methylpentanol, 3-pentanol, pentanone, as two major products of the hydrogenation along with 3-pentanone (6%) and other higher alcohols presented in smaller amounts. GCMS qualitative analysis of higher alcohols formed is shown in Table 31. 100% of the methyl ketene dimer/trimer mixture was reduced. 43-50% higher alcohol product was formed of which 16-27% was 3-pentanola and 19-28% was 2-methyl pentanol.
Experiment 27: Conversion of propanoic acid to 3-pentanol via ketonization and reduction: The continuous flow reactor system (
Product of the reaction was analyzed on a GCMS indicating a mixture with 65% 3-pentanol including other C4-8 alcohols with about 72% alcohols. Other products were 13% C7-14 aromatics and about 4% pentanone. GCMS qualitative analysis of products formed is shown in Table 32 and also presents a theoretical estimation of the calorific value of a mixture.
The reaction system consists of a) a liquid-phase carbonylation reactor, b) a methyl iodide-acetic acid splitter column, and c) a flasher. The latter two systems are employed to recover catalyst solutions, methyl iodide and methyl acetate and separate product acetic acid. The carbonylation reactor consists of a stirred autoclave within which the reacting liquid contents are maintained at constant level of approximately 1800 ml with contents analyzed periodically. Into this reactor are fed methanol, sufficient water and recycled catalyst solution from the flasher and recycled methyl acetate and methyl iodide from the acetic acid methyl iodide splitter column. The composition of the reaction medium is maintained such that there is 13-16% methyl iodide, 4-5 wt. % methyl acetate, 19-19.5 wt. % lithium iodide, 4-5 wt. % water, and 310 to 335 ppm rhodium with the balance of the composition acetic acid which is drawn off as it formed. CO gas containing some hydrogen with a partial pressure of about 20 psi is fed continuously to the system as the mixture is agitated for thorough mixing of gases as reactor pressure is kept at 28 atmospheres with reactor temperature at 189-191° C. Reaction medium is distilled out and acetic acid separated to yield about 14 gram moles of acetic acid/hr/lit of reaction medium. See Torrence et al, U.S. Pat. No. 4,994,608.
Direct Conversion of Methanol to Ethanol:The autoclave is charged with 0.52 g of rhodium dicarbonyl acetylacetonate, Rh(CO2)acac, (2 mmol), 0.82 g of ruthenium trichloride hydrate, 0.82 g of 1,3bis (diphenylphosphino)propane (2 mmol), 2.5 mL of methyl iodide (40.1 mmol) and 40 mL of methanol. The reactor contents are then heated to 140° C. and the pressure adjusted to 1,000 psig using a H2:CO mixture having a 2:1 mole ratio. The reaction is continued for 2.75 hours at 975±25 psig and stopped, during which period 3,350 psig of synthesis gas is consumed. The reactor is then cooled and recovered. Analysis of the recovered liquid product indicates formation and presence of about 27.5% ethanol, 10.1% acetaldehyde, 10.2% ethyl acetate, 11.5% methyl acetate, 2.5% acetic acid, 0.5% dimethyl acetal, 1.7% diethyl ether, 11.9% dimethyl ether 17.5% methanol and 2.9% methyl iodide. See Wegman et al, U.S. Pat. No. 4,727,200.
Carbonylation of Ethanol:The catalyst, RhCl3.3H2O at conc. of 7.63×10−6 mol cm−3, ethanol at conc. of 0.69×10−2 mol cm−3 and hydroiodic acid at concentration of 0.11×10−2 mol are dissolved in water. The solution is then charged into the reactor, flushed with carbon monoxide and the contents heated to 200° C. temperature within ten minutes. The reactor is pressurized with 2-3 atm of carbon monoxide and the reaction was started by switching on the stirrer. Pressure in the reactor was maintained using a constant pressure regulator between the reactor and the gas reservoir. The progress of the reaction was followed by observing the pressure drop in the reservoir as a function of time. The liquid samples were taken periodically and also analyzed by GC. After absorption 0.7 moles of CO, an analysis of a liquid phase showed a complete consumption of ethanol and formation of propionic acid with 99% selectivity at about 0.7×10−2 mol/cm−3 concentration. See Dake et al, Journal of Molecular Catalysis, 24 (1984) 99-113.
While a number of exemplary embodiments, aspects and variations have been provided herein, those of skill in the art will recognize certain modifications, permutations, additions and combinations and certain sub-combinations of the embodiments, aspects and variations. It is intended that the following claims are interpreted to include all such modifications, permutations, additions and combinations and certain sub-combinations of the embodiments, aspects and variations are within their scope. The entire disclosures of all documents cited throughout this application are incorporated herein by reference.
REFERENCES1. Organic Synthesis, Coll. Vol. 3, pp 508 (1955).
2. Organic Synthesis, Vol. 20, pp 26 (1940). Organic Synthesis, Coll. Vol. 3, pp 508 (1955).
3. Organic Letters, 2004, 6(3), 373-376.
4. Journal of American Chemical Society, 2002, 124(7), 1174-5.
5. Journal of American Chemical Society, 2010, 132(33), 11412-3.
6. The Chemistry of Ketenes, Allenes and Related Compounds, Part 1, 292 John Wiley and Sons, New York (1980).
7. Japan patent, No 47-25065.
8. Journal of Chemical Society, 1952, pp 2563-2568, The Preparation and Dimerization of Methylketene, Jenkins, A. D.
9. Recent advances in process and catalysis for the production of acetic acid, Appl. Cat. A: General, 221, 253-265, 2001.
Claims
1.-26. (canceled)
27. A method for the preparation of a C3-C7 alcohol comprising:
- a) preparing a beta-lactone of the formula III:
- wherein:
- R3 is H or a C1-2 alkyl;
- R4 is H;
- R5 is H or C1-2 alkyl; or
- R4 and R5 are combined to form ethyledene or methyledene; and
- b) hydrogenating the lactone to form the C3-C7 alcohol.
28. The method of claim 27, wherein the beta-lactone of the formula III is selected from the group consisting of beta-butyrolactone, 4-ethyl-3-methyloxetan-2-one and (E) and (Z)-4-ethylidene-3-methyloxetan-2-one or mixtures thereof.
29. The method of claim 27, wherein:
- a) the beta-lactone of the formula III, wherein R3 is H and R4 is H and R5 is —CH3, is prepared by the oxidation of propylene to form propylene oxide, carbonylation of propylene oxide to form beta-buyrolactone, and hydrogenation of beta-butyrolactone to form butanol; or
- b) the beta-lactone of the formula III, wherein R3 is H and R4 is H and R5 is —CH3, is prepared by a reaction of acetaldehyde and ketene to form beta-buyrolactone, and hydrogenation of beta-butyrolactone to form butanol; or
- c) the beta-lactone of the formula III, wherein R3 is H and R4 is H and R5 is —CH3, is prepared by the oxidation of propylene to form propylene oxide, carbonylation of propylene oxide to form beta-buyrolactone, hydrogenation of beta-butyrolactone to form butyric acid, and ketonization of butyric acid to form heptanone, and hydrogenation of heptanone to form 4-heptanol; or
- d) the beta-lactone of the formula III, wherein R3 is H and R4 is H and R5 is —CH3, is prepared by the reaction of acetaldehyde with ketene to from beta-butyrolactone, hydrogenation of beta-butyrolactone to form butyric acid, ketonization of butyric acid and hydrogenation of heptanone to form 4-heptanol; or
- e) the beta-lactone of the formula III, wherein R3 is —CH3 and R4 and R5 are combined to form ═CH(CH3), is prepared by preparing methyl ketene, converting the methyl ketene to (E) and (Z)-4-ethylidene-3-methyloxetan-2-one, and hydrogenating the (E) and (Z)-4-ethylidene-3-methyloxetan-2-one in the presence of a catalyst to form 2-methyl pentanol.
30.-31. (canceled)
32. A method for the preparation of propanol or butanol, or a mixture thereof, comprising:
- a) carbonylation of methanol or ethanol to form acetic acid or propanoic acid, respectively; and
- b) reduction of acetic acid or propanoic acid to form ethanol or propanol, respectively;
- c) carbonylation of ethanol or propanol to from propanoic acid or butanoic acid, respectively, or carbonylation of a mixture of ethanol and propanol to form a mixture of propionic acid and butyric acid; and
- d) reduction of butanoic acid to form butanol; and optionally
- e) hydrogenating a mixture of propionic acid and butyric acid to form a mixture of propanol and butanol.
33. A fuel composition comprising the alkane compounds prepared by the method of claim 32.
34. The fuel composition of claim 33, wherein the fuel composition is blended with gasoline.
35. The fuel composition of claim 34, wherein the alkane compounds are selected from the group consisting of 1-butanol and 2-butanol, or comprising 1-butanol, 2-butanol, 2-pentanol, 3-pentanol, 2-hexanol, 3-hexanol, 2-heptanol, 4-heptanol, heptane, 3-methyl cyclohexanol, 2,6-dimethyl-4-heptanol and mixtures thereof, prepared by claim 32, further comprising gasoline to form gasoline fuel mixture.
36. The gasoline fuel mixture of claim 35, wherein the gasoline comprises of at least 15%, 35%, 50%, 75% or 85% of the gasoline fuel.
37. The gasoline fuel mixture of claim 36, wherein the mixture comprises at least 5%, 15%, 35%, 50%, 70%, 85% or 95% 3-pentanol or heptanol.
Type: Application
Filed: Apr 23, 2015
Publication Date: Sep 24, 2015
Applicant: Pioneer Energy, Inc. (Lakewood, CO)
Inventors: John Henri (Longmont, CO), Jan Zygmunt (Longmont, CO), Mark Berggren (Golden, CO), Robert Zubrin (Golden, CO)
Application Number: 14/694,880