Improving Product Yield in the Direct Carboxylation of Glycerol with CO<sub>2</sub> through the Tailored Selection of Dehydrating Agents

Improved yields of, and selectivities to, value-added products synthesised from glycerol are shown to be achieved through the judicious selection of dehydrating agents and through the development of improved catalysts. The direct carboxylation of glycerol with CO<sub>2</sub> over lanthan...

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Main Authors: Nurul Razali, James McGregor
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-01-01
Series:Catalysts
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4344/11/1/138
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spelling doaj-39a894e99bf9400b8be4c2fb830861f92021-01-19T00:04:18ZengMDPI AGCatalysts2073-43442021-01-011113813810.3390/catal11010138Improving Product Yield in the Direct Carboxylation of Glycerol with CO<sub>2</sub> through the Tailored Selection of Dehydrating AgentsNurul Razali0James McGregor1Faculty of Ocean Engineering Technology and Informatics, Universiti Malaysia Terengganu, Kuala Terengganu 21300, MalaysiaDepartment of Chemical and Biological Engineering, University of Sheffield, Mappin Street, Sheffield S1 3JD, UKImproved yields of, and selectivities to, value-added products synthesised from glycerol are shown to be achieved through the judicious selection of dehydrating agents and through the development of improved catalysts. The direct carboxylation of glycerol with CO<sub>2</sub> over lanthanum-based catalysts can yield glycerol carbonate in the presence of basic species, or acetins in the presence of acidic molecules. The formation of glycerol carbonate is thermodynamically limited; removal of produced water shifts the chemical equilibrium to the product side. Acetonitrile, benzonitrile and adiponitrile have been investigated as basic dehydrating agents to promote glycerol carbonate synthesis. In parallel, acetic anhydride has been studied as an acidic dehydrating agent to promote acetin formation. Alongside this, the influence of the catalyst synthesis method has been investigated allowing links between the physicochemical properties of the catalyst and catalytic performance to be determined. The use of acetonitrile and La catalysts allows the results for the novel dehydrating agents to be benchmarked against literature data. Notably, adiponitrile exhibits significantly enhanced performance over other dehydrating agents, e.g., achieving a 5-fold increase in glycerol carbonate yield with respect to acetonitrile. This is in part ascribed to the fact that each molecule of adiponitrile has two nitrile functionalities to promote the reactive removal of water. In addition, mechanistic insights show that adiponitrile results in reduced by-product formation. Considering by-product formation, 4-hydroxymethyl(oxazolidin)-2-one (4-HMO) has, for the first time, been observed in all reaction systems using cyanated species. Studies investigating the influence of the catalyst synthesis route show a complex relationship between surface basicity, surface area, crystallite phase and reactivity. These results suggest alternative strategies to maximise the yield of desirable products from glycerol through tailoring the reaction chemistry and by-product formation via an appropriate choice of dehydrating agents and co-reagents.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4344/11/1/138glycerincarbon dioxideLa<sub>2</sub>O<sub>3</sub>glycerolcarbonatesacetins
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nurul Razali
James McGregor
spellingShingle Nurul Razali
James McGregor
Improving Product Yield in the Direct Carboxylation of Glycerol with CO<sub>2</sub> through the Tailored Selection of Dehydrating Agents
Catalysts
glycerin
carbon dioxide
La<sub>2</sub>O<sub>3</sub>
glycerol
carbonates
acetins
author_facet Nurul Razali
James McGregor
author_sort Nurul Razali
title Improving Product Yield in the Direct Carboxylation of Glycerol with CO<sub>2</sub> through the Tailored Selection of Dehydrating Agents
title_short Improving Product Yield in the Direct Carboxylation of Glycerol with CO<sub>2</sub> through the Tailored Selection of Dehydrating Agents
title_full Improving Product Yield in the Direct Carboxylation of Glycerol with CO<sub>2</sub> through the Tailored Selection of Dehydrating Agents
title_fullStr Improving Product Yield in the Direct Carboxylation of Glycerol with CO<sub>2</sub> through the Tailored Selection of Dehydrating Agents
title_full_unstemmed Improving Product Yield in the Direct Carboxylation of Glycerol with CO<sub>2</sub> through the Tailored Selection of Dehydrating Agents
title_sort improving product yield in the direct carboxylation of glycerol with co<sub>2</sub> through the tailored selection of dehydrating agents
publisher MDPI AG
series Catalysts
issn 2073-4344
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Improved yields of, and selectivities to, value-added products synthesised from glycerol are shown to be achieved through the judicious selection of dehydrating agents and through the development of improved catalysts. The direct carboxylation of glycerol with CO<sub>2</sub> over lanthanum-based catalysts can yield glycerol carbonate in the presence of basic species, or acetins in the presence of acidic molecules. The formation of glycerol carbonate is thermodynamically limited; removal of produced water shifts the chemical equilibrium to the product side. Acetonitrile, benzonitrile and adiponitrile have been investigated as basic dehydrating agents to promote glycerol carbonate synthesis. In parallel, acetic anhydride has been studied as an acidic dehydrating agent to promote acetin formation. Alongside this, the influence of the catalyst synthesis method has been investigated allowing links between the physicochemical properties of the catalyst and catalytic performance to be determined. The use of acetonitrile and La catalysts allows the results for the novel dehydrating agents to be benchmarked against literature data. Notably, adiponitrile exhibits significantly enhanced performance over other dehydrating agents, e.g., achieving a 5-fold increase in glycerol carbonate yield with respect to acetonitrile. This is in part ascribed to the fact that each molecule of adiponitrile has two nitrile functionalities to promote the reactive removal of water. In addition, mechanistic insights show that adiponitrile results in reduced by-product formation. Considering by-product formation, 4-hydroxymethyl(oxazolidin)-2-one (4-HMO) has, for the first time, been observed in all reaction systems using cyanated species. Studies investigating the influence of the catalyst synthesis route show a complex relationship between surface basicity, surface area, crystallite phase and reactivity. These results suggest alternative strategies to maximise the yield of desirable products from glycerol through tailoring the reaction chemistry and by-product formation via an appropriate choice of dehydrating agents and co-reagents.
topic glycerin
carbon dioxide
La<sub>2</sub>O<sub>3</sub>
glycerol
carbonates
acetins
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4344/11/1/138
work_keys_str_mv AT nurulrazali improvingproductyieldinthedirectcarboxylationofglycerolwithcosub2subthroughthetailoredselectionofdehydratingagents
AT jamesmcgregor improvingproductyieldinthedirectcarboxylationofglycerolwithcosub2subthroughthetailoredselectionofdehydratingagents
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