| Literature DB >> 30534550 |
Amin Talebian-Kiakalaieh1,2, Nor Aishah Saidina Amin2, Neda Najaafi3, Sara Tarighi1.
Abstract
The last 20 years have seen an unprecedented breakthrough in the biodiesel industry worldwide leads to abundance of glycerol. Therefore, the economic utilization of glycerol to various value-added chemicals is vital for the sustainability of the biodiesel industry. One of the promising processes is acetalization of glycerol to acetals and ketals for applications as fuel additives. These products could be obtained by acid-catalyzed reaction of glycerol with aldehydes and ketones. Application of different supported heterogeneous catalysts such as zeolites, heteropoly acids, metal-based and acid-exchange resins have been evaluated comprehensively in this field. In this review, the glycerol acetalization has been reported, focusing on innovative and potential technologies for sustainable production of solketal. In addition, the impacts of various parameters such as application of different reactants, reaction temperature, water removal, utilization of crude-glycerol on catalytic activity in both batch and continuous processes are discussed. The outcomes of this research will therefore significantly improve the technology required in tomorrow's bio-refineries. This review provides spectacular opportunities for us to use such renewables and will consequently benefit the industry, environment and economy.Entities:
Keywords: acetalization; acetone; fuel additives; glycerol; heterogeneous catalysts; ketone
Year: 2018 PMID: 30534550 PMCID: PMC6275326 DOI: 10.3389/fchem.2018.00573
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Chem ISSN: 2296-2646 Impact factor: 5.221
Catalytic conversion of glycerol into value-added chemicals by different processes.
| Oxidation | ||||||
| Hydrogenolysis | ||||||
| Dehydration | ||||||
| Pyrolysis, Gasification | CnH2n+2 | CnH2n | ROH | (CO + H2) | (C + H2) | |
| Trans- Esterification | ||||||
| Etherification | ||||||
| Oligomerization, Polymerization | Polyglycerol methacrylates | |||||
| Carboxylation | ||||||
| Acetalization | ||||||
Different catalytic conversion of glycerol into value-added chemicals.
Figure 1Reaction mechanism of glycerol with aldehydes/ketones.
Physico-chemical properties of glycerol.
| Chemical formula | CH2OH–CHOH–CH2OH | |
| Formula weight | 92.09 | |
| Form and color | Colorless and liquid | |
| Specific gravity | 1.26050/4 | |
| Melting point | 17.9°C | |
| Boiling point | 290°C | |
| Solubility in 100 parts | ||
| Water | Infinitely | |
| Alcohol | Infinitely | |
| Ether | Insoluble | |
| Vapor pressure in 760 mmHg | 290°C | |
| Heat of fusion at 18.07°C | 47.49 cal/g | |
| Viscosity liquid glycerol | ||
| 100% | 10 cP | |
| 50% | 25 cP | |
| Diffusivity in | (DL × 105 sq.cm/s) | |
| i-Amyl alcohol | 0.12 | |
| Ethanol | 0.56 | |
| Water | 0.94 | |
| 2.12 | 0.961 | 0.960 |
| 4.66 | 0.929 | 0.924 |
| 11.5 | 0.851 | 0.841 |
| 22.7 | 0.765 | 0.758 |
| 43.9 | 0.670 | 0.672 |
| 100 | 0.555 | 0.576 |
Glycerol acetalization with different aldehydes and ketones in batch and continuous processes.
| Homogenous | PTSA | MR | YAcetal = 80 | – | Ruiz et al., | |
| PTSA | MR Gl/Ac | Con = 82 | – | Suriyapradilok and Kitiyanan, | ||
| PTSA | MR Gl/Ben | Con = 67 | Microwave assisted, Power = 600 W; Con = 95% without catalyst | Pawar et al., | ||
| H2SO4 | MR Gl/F = 1.5/1 | YAcetal = 89 | – | Coleman and Blankenship, | ||
| Heterogeneous | Zeolites | Zeolite beta | MR Gl/F = 1/1 | YAcetal = 25 | – | Ruiz et al., |
| Zeolite beta | MR Gl/Ac = 1/2 | Con = 90 | – | da Silva and Mota, | ||
| H beta zeolite | MR Gl/Ac = 1/2 | Con = 86 | – | Manjunathan et al., | ||
| Zeolite USY | MR Gl/Bu | Con = 72 | – | Serafim et al., | ||
| Zeolite BEA | Con = 87 | |||||
| Zeolite ZSM | Con = 28 | |||||
| MMT K10 | MR Gl/Ben = 1/2 | Con = 84 | Microwave assisted, Power = 600 W | Roldan et al., | ||
| Con = 95 | No catalyst | |||||
| Nb5-HUSY | MR Gl/Ac = | Con = 66SSolketal = 98 | – | Ferreira et al., | ||
| MK-10SMW | Con = 68SSolketal = 66 | Microwave synthesis enhanced reaction conversion | Gutiérrez-Acebo et al., | |||
| [5%V]Si-ITQ-6 | Con = 100SSolketal = >95 | Acetone washing could reduce the catalyst deactivation after each run | Vieira et al., | |||
| Zr-MO-KIT-6 | Con = 85.8SSolketal = 97.8 | – | Li et al., | |||
| Immobilize sulfonic acid on to silica | Con = 78 | Argon atmosphere in the presence of Benzaldehyde | Adam et al., | |||
| Zeolite betaCP814E | MR Gl/Ac = 1/6 | Con = 82% | – | Maksimov et al., | ||
| Zeolite betaCP811T1 | Con = 85% | |||||
| Zeolite HY | Con = 37% | |||||
| Heterogeneous | Zeolites | Hierarchical Zeolite (H/BEA5) | Con = 78SSolketal = 85 | – | Sonar et al., | |
| 6.8v-MCM-41 | Con = 92SSolketal = 95 | – | Abreu et al., | |||
| ITQ-2 | T = 83°C, HMF/Gl = 1/2, Cat = 20 wt%, Si/Al = 15 | Con = 98S5R+6R = 100 | Products ratio 5R/6R = 2.8 | Arias et al., | ||
| MCM-41 | Con = 99S5R+6R = 100 | Products ratio 5R/6R = 3.9 | ||||
| Heteropoly acid | Cs2.5H0.5PW12O40 | Con = 95SSolketal = 98 | – | Chen et al., | ||
| Cs2.5/KIT-6 | Con = 95YGF = 60 | – | Chen et al., | |||
| Acid exchange resins | Nafion SAC 13 | MR Gl/Ben = 1/2 | Con = 81 | Microwave assisted, Power = 600 W, Con = 95% without catalyst | Trifoi et al., | |
| Dowex | MR Gl/Bu = 1/2.5 T = 70°C, | Con = 66 | – | Serafim et al., | ||
| Amberlyst 36 | MR Gl/F = 1/1, | Y = 55 | – | Ruiz et al., | ||
| Amberlyst 15 | MR Gl/Ac = 1/2 | Con = 95 | – | |||
| Amberlyst 15 | MR Gl/Ac = 1/2 | Con = 95 | – | |||
| Amberlyst 47 | MR Gl/F = 2/1 | Con = 75 | – | Agirre et al., | ||
| Amberlyst 47 | MR Gl/Ac = 2/1 | Con = 90 | ||||
| Amberlyst 47 | MR Gl/But | Con = 95 | – | Guemez et al., | ||
| MR Gl/But = 0.5/1 | Con = 100 | |||||
| Amberlyst 15 | MR Gl/F = 1/2 T = 75°C, | Con = 100% | Reactive distillation process | Hasabnis and Mahajani, | ||
| Heterogeneous | Metal-based | Ni-activated carbon | MR Gl/Ac = 1/8 | Con = 98 | 3% reduction of catalytic activity after the 4th run | Khayoon and Hameed, |
| Zr-activated carbon | Con = 67 | |||||
| X%Ni-Y%Zr/ activated carbon | Con = 100 | |||||
| Ni-MWCNT | MR Gl/Ac = 1/6 | Con = 96 | 5% reduction of catalytic activity after 4th run | Khayoon et al., | ||
| Pt-TNT | Con = 46.7SSolketal = 10 | – | Gomes et al., | |||
| M-AlPO4M-ZnAlPO4M-CuAlPO4M-NiAlPO4M-CoAlPO4 | MR Gl/Ac = 1/8 | Con = 75 | 80% reduction of M-NiAlPO4 activity after the 5th run | Zhang et al., | ||
| PTNT | Con = 40SSoketal = 20 | – | Gomes et al., | |||
| SO4/SnO2 | Gl-Fur | Con = 99 | – | Mallesham et al., | ||
| TiO2-SiO2 | MR Gl/Ac = 1/4 | Con = 98 | Fan et al., | |||
| MoX/TiO2-ZrO2 | MR Gl/Ben = 1/1 | Con = 74 | – | Sudarsanam et al., | ||
| Niobium oxyhydroxyde | MR Gl/Ac = 1/4 | Con = 74 | – | Souza et al., | ||
| Nb2O5 | MR Gl/Ac = 1/3 T = 70 °C, t = 6 h | Con = 80 | Up to 4 time reusability | Nair et al., | ||
| HC-SZ ( | Con = 96, YSolketal = 94 | – | Vasantha et al., | |||
| Meso-SnO2-350 | Con = 51.3SSolketal = 98 | Higher selectivity to the solketal in the presence of Acetone compared to the Furfuraldehyde and benzaldehyde | Manjunathan et al., | |||
| Heterogeneous | Other catalysts | Rare earth triflate | Gl-Ac | Con = 100 | – | Pierpont et al., |
| Organic-inorganic hybrid catalyst | MR Gl/Ac = 1/6 | Con = 94 | Water resistance | Sandesh et al., | ||
| (L)Ru(II)@SBA-15 | Con = 100SSolketal = 100 | – | Lazar et al., | |||
| 80LS20PS450H+ | Con = 90 | SSoketal = 51–53% obtained over Furfural and Methyl levulinate instead of acetone | Konwar et al., | |||
| PrSO3H-SBA-15-400 | SSolektal = 60 | – | Li et al., | |||
| Carbon-based catalyst | Con = >78SSolketal = 73 | – | Mantovani et al., | |||
| Co(II)!!!!(Co(III)1.25)Al2−0.75)O4 | Con = 69.2SSolketal = 98.6 | – | Li et al., | |||
| Purolite PD206 | Normalized exergy destraction = 6.18%, Universal Exergetic efficiency = 90.36% | Optimization and modeling of continuous acetalization process with subcritical acetone | Aghbashloa et al., | |||
| KU-2 | MR Gl/Ac = 1/6 | Con = 85% | – | Maksimov et al., | ||
| Purolite PD 206 | MR Gl/Ac = 5/1 | Con = 95% | Acetone-solvent | Shirani et al., | ||
MR, Molar Ratio;
F, Formaldehyde;
Con, Conversion (%);
Y, Yield (%);
Ac, Acetone;
Ben, Benzaldehyde;
Bu, Butanal;
But, Butiraldehyde;
MWCNTs, Multiwall carbon nano-tubes;
Fur, Furfural;
kSel, Selectivity.
Figure 2Annual operation costs.
Figure 3Bottom-up and top-down models for synthesizing hierarchical mesoporous zeolites.
Figure 4Proposed reaction mechanism for the acetalization of glycerol and acetone over Lewis acid catalyst.
Figure 5HPA keggin structure.
Figure 6Products with application of various ketones.
Figure 7(A) Glycerol acetalization using different mordenite catalysts. (B) Effect of microwave power on glycerol acetalization over Cu-Mor catalyst.
Figure 8Plausible reaction mechanism of glycerol acetalization over metal promoted mordenite catalysts.
Figure 9Method for preparing sulfonic acid functionalized carbon materials from LS.
Effect of glycerol ether additives on the antiwear properties of heavy cycle oil (ASTM D 2266-01 test method).
| 1 | Additive-free cycle oil | 0.94 | – | |
| 2 | Solketal | 460 | 0.71 | 25 |
| 3 | 980 | 0.61 | 35 | |
| 4 | 22,470 | 0.54 | 43 | |
| 5 | Mixture of di-GTBEs | 5,250 | 0.76 | 19 |
| 6 | 1,200 | 0.84 | 11 | |
| 7 | 440 | 0.88 | 6 | |
| 8 | STBE/solketal, 70/30 | 490 | 0.87 | 7 |
| 9 | 1,242 | 0.82 | 13 | |
| 10 | 5,039 | 0.61 | 35 | |
Wear spot diameter;
Relative change to additive-free cycle oil WSD.
Figure 10Possible pathways of STBE formation.
Figure 11Proposed reaction mechanism for glycerol and acetone acetalization over acid catalyst.