Meixiu Wei1,2, Haoran Ma3, Qilin Lu3, Da Ruan3, Zhengdong Ma3, Xiao Chen1,2,3. 1. Key Laboratory of General Chemistry of the National Ethnic Affairs Commission, Southwest Minzu University, Chengdu, Sichuan 610225, China. 2. Key Laboratory of Pollution Control Chemistry and Environmental Functional Materials for Qinghai-Tibet Plateau of the National Ethnic Affairs Commission, Southwest Minzu University, Chengdu, Sichuan 610225, China. 3. Microfluidic Synthesis and Separation Laboratory, College of Chemistry and Environment, Southwest Minzu University, Chengdu, Sichuan 610041, China.
Abstract
A microreactor (MR) with a vaporization microchamber and a sinusoidal wave microchannel was fabricated to synthesize 2-cyanopyrazine (CP) directly with an aqueous 2-methylpyrazine (MP) solution. A continuous-flow process with high space-time yield was achieved under the premise of strong exothermality of this ammoxidation reaction. The vanadium metal oxide catalysts with four different supports (α-Al2O3, γ-Al2O3, ZSM-5(50), ZSM-5(80)) were evaluated by simply stacking in the wave microchannel from 350 to 540 °C. The process parameters (temperature, reactant ratio, and size of catalysts) were optimized with the selected CrVPO/γ-Al2O3 catalyst, and an optimal ammoxidation process with MP conversion (X MP) of 71.5% and CP selectivity (S CP) of 93.7% was obtained by a volume space velocity (GHSV) of 13 081 h-1 at 480 °C. Correspondingly, the space-time yield of CP (STYCP) was 1724-77 082 gCPkgcat -1h-1, which was the highest value ever reported for this reaction. Meanwhile, the ammoxidation reaction showed a great continuous-synthesis stability of 50-h running in the microreactor with the CP yield (Y CP) remaining 56%-68%.
A microreactor (MR) with a vaporization microchamber and a sinusoidal wave microchannel was fabricated to synthesize 2-cyanopyrazine (CP) directly with an aqueous 2-methylpyrazine (MP) solution. A continuous-flow process with high space-time yield was achieved under the premise of strong exothermality of this ammoxidation reaction. The vanadium metal oxide catalysts with four different supports (α-Al2O3, γ-Al2O3, ZSM-5(50), ZSM-5(80)) were evaluated by simply stacking in the wave microchannel from 350 to 540 °C. The process parameters (temperature, reactant ratio, and size of catalysts) were optimized with the selected CrVPO/γ-Al2O3 catalyst, and an optimal ammoxidation process with MP conversion (X MP) of 71.5% and CP selectivity (S CP) of 93.7% was obtained by a volume space velocity (GHSV) of 13 081 h-1 at 480 °C. Correspondingly, the space-time yield of CP (STYCP) was 1724-77 082 gCPkgcat -1h-1, which was the highest value ever reported for this reaction. Meanwhile, the ammoxidation reaction showed a great continuous-synthesis stability of 50-h running in the microreactor with the CP yield (Y CP) remaining 56%-68%.
Heterogeneous
catalytic ammoxidation of alkyl aromatics and heteroaromatics
is an essential reaction to synthesize a variety of pharmaceutical
and chemical products, characterized by the conversion of methyl to
nitrile group.[1,2] Some bulk-chemical-product reactions,
like propylene to acrylonitrile,[3−6] propane to acrylonitrile,[7−10] ethane ammoxidation to acetonitrile
and ethylene,[11−13] have been researched extensively and deeply since
the 1970s. However, because of the strong exothermic characteristics
of the ammoxidation reaction, efficient heat-transfer and intrinsic-safety
had been mainly focused even to now.[14] Additionally,
pharmaceutical-product reactions, like ammoxidation of 2-methylpyrazine
(MP) to 2-cyanopyrazine (CP), which now is a chosen low cost and short-path
route to synthesize antituberculosis (TB) drug pyrazinamide,[3] have attracted gradually increasing attention
(Scheme ).
Scheme 1
Reaction
Scheme for Ammoxidation of MP
The reaction leads
to CP,
other heteroaromatic byproducts, and products of total oxidation as
well.
Reaction
Scheme for Ammoxidation of MP
The reaction leads
to CP,
other heteroaromatic byproducts, and products of total oxidation as
well.At present, MP ammoxidation research
mainly focuses on catalysts.[15−24] Mixed oxide catalysts (MV, M = Al, Fe, Cr, Nb, La, Bi, La)[19,20,23] at 320–460 °C, supported
vanadium metal oxide catalysts (V2O5–Au/TiO,
CrVPO/Al2O3)[21,17] at 370–400
°C, and metal-salt catalysts[15,16,18,22,24] at about 450 °C had been investigated, and the reported CP
yield were 50–86%. Among these catalysts, CrVPO was more promising
by its lower cost and better performance of >85% yield and 92%
selectivity.[17] To be mentioned, the highest
space-time yield
(STY) of CP were reported as 500–900 gCP·kgcat–1·h–1 by a La0.1V0.9O catalyst in
2016.[23]In recent years, microreactors[25−30] had been applied for the ammoxidation reaction,[31,32] like from propane to acrylonitrile, and showed good performance
by its high heat transfer coefficient. However, the reported MP ammoxidation
mainly used Φ20–30 mm fixed-bed reactors (FBR), and the
reaction temperature was limited within 450 °C because of possible
hot spots at higher temperature. Especially, when the flow rate of
MP was high in a FBR reactor, the expansion of hot spots in the catalyst
bed might increase byproducts of carbon oxides and reduce the yield
of CP.[23] With respect to the results of
higher reaction temperature can raise the MP conversion and may be
tolerated by the microreactor,[33−38] obviously a continuous-flow microreactor carrying out MP ammoxidation
stably at higher temperature would be an ideal reactor for efficiently
synthesis CP. Especially, a continuous microfluidic flow would imbue
an improved safety profile through the use of reduced volumes of gas
within limited explosion space, which is also called the intrinsic
safety of microreactors. Therefore, a continuous-flow microreaction
may be feasible to get an integration solution of temperature control
of MP ammoxidation and CP STY improvement.In this study, we
designed and fabricated a microreactor with a
vaporization microchamber and a sinusoidal wave microchannel, aiming
to synthesize CP by ammonia oxidation at high temperature under continuous
gas–liquid mixture feeding. The performance of this microreactor
was systematically studied with CrVPO as the catalyst.
Experimental Section
Materials
Chromium
trioxide (AR)
was purchased from Chengdu Jinshan Chemical Reagent Co. Ltd. Vanadium
pentoxide (AR) was purchased from Tianjin Meilin Industry and Trade
Co. Ltd. Phosphoric acid (AR) was purchased from Chengdu Kelong Chemical
Reagent Factory. Oxalic acid was purchased from Tianjin Zhiyuan Chemical
Reagent Co. Ltd. 2-Methylpyrazine (AR) and other chemicals used in
this work were obtained from Chengdu Best Reagent Co. Ltd. All the
chemicals were used as purchased without any further purification.
Fabrication of Microreactor
Figure is the schematic
diagram of the microreactor, which consists of a stainless steel microchannel
plate (Figure b),
aluminum foil, and a cover plate (Figure c). The microreactor was assembled by laminating
the three plates with bolts. The microchannel was machined out on
the 20 mm-in-depth stainless steel plate and made up of two sections:
an elliptical liquid vaporization chamber and a sinusoidal wave microchannel.
The former was with a long axis of 20 mm and a short axis of 10 mm.
The latter was with a width and height of 2.0 mm and 0.5 mm, respectively.
The total length of the microchannel is 440 mm. The liquid vaporization
chamber was designed to realize vaporization, mixing, and heat transfer
simultaneously. The reactant inlet was connected with the chamber,
which provides expansion space for the vaporization of MP solution,
reduces the gas velocity, and prolongs the mixing time with other
gas feeds. Moreover, the sinusoidal wave microchannel was utilized
to constantly redirect the gas fluid and promote micromixing.[39] The sinusoidal structure design could also reduce
the dead angle, which is conducive to the cleaning and reuse of the
microreactor. A 0.1 mm thick aluminum foil was added as the O-seal
between the microchannel plate and the cover. The good ductility and
heat resistance of aluminum foil enhanced channel encapsulation under
high-temperature conditions and improved the airtightness of the device.
Figure 1
Schematic
diagram of the microreactor (a) and details of the microchannel
plate and the catalyst packing method (b), aluminum foil, and cover
plate (c).
Schematic
diagram of the microreactor (a) and details of the microchannel
plate and the catalyst packing method (b), aluminum foil, and cover
plate (c).
Preparation
of CrVPO Catalysts
The
CrVPO catalyst was prepared with the impregnation method.[11] First, 2.7 g of oxalic acid, 0.284 g of vanadium
pentoxide (V2O5), and 0.25 g of chromium trioxide
(CrO3) were successively dissolved in 35 mL of distilled
water. Next, 0.275 mL of phosphoric acid (H3PO4) was added to get the molar ratio of Cr:V:P = 0.8:0.5:1.7, and then
the mixture was stirred at a constant temperature of 50–70
°C for 10 min. When the solution was cooled to room temperature,
2.5 g of catalyst support (α-Al2O3, γ-Al2O3, ZSM-5(50), ZSM-5(80), here 50 and 80 refer
to the Si/Al ratio of the ZSM-5 molecular sieve) was added into the
solution and shaken at 80 rpm for 24–48 h in an immersion oscillator
(SHZ–B, Jintan) after ultrasonic treatment at 50 W power for
6 h. The catalysts were formed by drying with rotary evaporation at
60 °C and calcination at 550 °C for 2 h. Finally, an agate
mortar was used to grind the solid catalysts, and the powder was screened
with sieves of 40–140 meshes.
Catalyst
Tests
The performance of
CrVPO catalysts in the microreactor was characterized by an experimental
apparatus shown in Figure . First, the catalyst powder with 5 particle sizes from 0.1
mm to 0.4 mm was piled into the microgroove in the center of the microchannel
plate, and quartz wool was placed on both sides of the catalyst section
to prevent the catalyst from being carried out by the gas flow. Then
the aluminum foil plate and the cover plate were installed according
to the device diagram in Figure and fastened with bolts. After that, a gas detector
was used to test the airtightness of the assembled microreactor. If
the tightness tests were passed, the reactor temperature would be
raised to a certain degree in the N2 atmosphere. After
the required temperature was reached for at least 5 min, the ammoxidation
reactions was started by precisely controlling the gas feed flow of
NH3 and O2 with two mass flowmeters (D07-19,
Sevenstar), and the flow of MP solution was controlled with a plunger
pump (TBP-1002, Tauto Biotech). The temperature of the microreactor
was detected and controlled by a temperature controller equipped with
a 1500 W electric heater beneath the microchannel plate. Generally,
the products were continuously collected at the outlet and detected
every 5 min. Data were collected 5 times and then averaged.
Figure 2
Schematic diagram
of apparatus. 1, cylinder; 2, relief valve; 3,
mass flowmeter; 4, plunger pump; 5, microreactor; 6, temperature controller;
7, absorber bottle; 8, off valve; 9, gas chromatograph.
Schematic diagram
of apparatus. 1, cylinder; 2, relief valve; 3,
mass flowmeter; 4, plunger pump; 5, microreactor; 6, temperature controller;
7, absorber bottle; 8, off valve; 9, gas chromatograph.The residence time τ and the volume space velocity
(GHSV)
were calculated to evaluate the reaction conditions using the following
formulas:where Vcat was
the volume of catalyst loading in the microchannels, and vtotal was volume flow rate of total gas reactants at the
inlet of the microreactor.The product samples were analyzed
with gas chromatography (SC-3000B,
Chuanyi) by the internal standard method when the continuous reaction
got a steady state. The GC condition was as follows: hydrogen flame
ionization detector, BK-wax capillary column 30 m × 0.32 mm ×
0.5 μm). Oven temperature: 120–180 °C; detector
temperature: 220 °C; vaporization chamber temperature: 220 °C;
oven heating program setting: heating from 120 to 180 °C, heating
at a rate of 20 °C/min, at 180 °C, The column oven temperature
was constant for 2 min; carrier gas nitrogen (N2): 0.4
mL/s, hydrogen (H2): 0.5 mL/s; air: 1.5 mL/s; precolumn
pressure: 0.2 MPa; injection volume: 0.4 μL; Injection mode:
split injection; split ratio: 30:1; makeup gas: N2: 0.4
mL/s. During 50 h of stability tests, product samples were collected
every 6 h in a steady state after 2 h of reaction.The conversion
of MP (XMP), the yield
and the selectivity of CP (YCP, SCP), and MP-based space-time yield (STYCP) were calculated using the following formulas:where cMP,0 and cMP were the MP concentration at
the inlet and
outlet of the microreactor respectively, cCP was the CP concentration at the outlet, FMP,0 was the molar flow rate of MP at the inlet, MCP was the molar mass of CP and mcat is the mass of the catalyst used.
Results
and Discussion
Catalytic Performance of
Four Catalysts
With respect to the process, the catalytic
reaction needs to endure
microfludic operation conditions in the microreator, like enhanced
mass transfer, high gas velocity, and so on. Therefore, to screen
the optimal catalyst for the microreaction of ammoxidation, four kinds
of supports (α-Al2O3, γ-Al2O3, ZSM-5(50), ZSM-5(80)) were evaluated for the CrVPO
catalyst at 480 °C, and the feed molar ratio is 1:5:6:12 (MP:H2O:NH3:O2). The results are shown in Figure . The results showed
that the selectivity of CP reached over 90% on CrVPO/γ-Al2O3 and CrVPO/ZSM-5 (50); the best conversion of
MP reached 71.5% on CrVPO/γ-Al2O3; and
the blank showed the lowest conversion (XMP = 7.4%). Additionally, CrVPO/γ-Al2O3 was chosen as the optimal catalyst for its best MP conversion and
high CP selectivity. Notably, the above performances were achieved
under a microfludic operation conditions, in which the load mass of
catalyst was only 0.03 g and the residence time in the microreactor
was as short as <0.01 s. As a comparison, the corresponding conditions
were 1–3 g catalyst load and ∼1 s resident time in the
conventional FBR, which were nearly 2 orders of magnitude higher.
Obviously, the reaction productivity of MP ammoxidation got enhanced
in the microreactor with much higher volume space velocity and space-time
yield of CP, and both parameters will be discussed in detail later.
Figure 3
Effects
of different supports on the CP synthesis (reaction conditions: T = 480 °C; feed molar ratio: MP:H2O:NH3:O2 = 1:5:6:12; catalyst weight = 0.03 g; MP flow:
0.05 mL/min, NH3 flow: 75 mL/min, O2 flow: 150
mL/min).
Effects
of different supports on the CP synthesis (reaction conditions: T = 480 °C; feed molar ratio: MP:H2O:NH3:O2 = 1:5:6:12; catalyst weight = 0.03 g; MP flow:
0.05 mL/min, NH3 flow: 75 mL/min, O2 flow: 150
mL/min).
Characterization
of Catalysts
To
indicate the suitable catalyst structure for the microreaction, the
micromorphology, surface area, and element distribution of the catalysts
were characterized with SEM (JSM 7160F, JEOL), BET (VII 2390, Gemini),
and EDS (Ultim Max65), and the results are shown in Figure , Table , and Figure , respectively.
Figure 4
SEM images of CrVPO loaded with γ-Al2O3 by the impregnation method (a) and α-Al2O3 (b), ZSM-5(50) (c), and ZSM-5(80) (d).
Table 1
Properties of Different Samples
entry
sample
surface
area (m2/g)a
pore volume (cc/g)b
pore
size (nm)
1
CrVPO/γ-Al2O3
121.72
0.23
8.67
2
CrVPO/α-Al2O3
29.72
0.12
21.53
3
CrVPO/ZSM-5(50)
244.29
0.11
9.39
4
CrVPO/ZSM-5(80)
290.04
0.13
12.48
Determined by N2 adsorption/desorption
using the Brunauer–Emmett–Teller (BET) method.
Determined by Barrett–Joyner–Halenda
(BJH) method.
Figure 5
SEM images and EDS surface
scan of the cross section of CrVPO/γ-Al2O3 catalyst (a) and atomic fraction of different
elements on the catalyst (b).
SEM images of CrVPO loaded with γ-Al2O3 by the impregnation method (a) and α-Al2O3 (b), ZSM-5(50) (c), and ZSM-5(80) (d).Determined by N2 adsorption/desorption
using the Brunauer–Emmett–Teller (BET) method.Determined by Barrett–Joyner–Halenda
(BJH) method.SEM images and EDS surface
scan of the cross section of CrVPO/γ-Al2O3 catalyst (a) and atomic fraction of different
elements on the catalyst (b).As shown in Figure a,b, the CrVPO/γ-Al2O3 sample (panel
a) and the CrVPO/α-Al2O3 sample (panel
b) had typical particle–substrate structures. As shown in Figure c,d, respectively,
the CrVPO/ZSM-5(50) sample (panel c) and the CrVPO/ZSM-5(80) sample
(panel d) had relatively uniform particle-packing structures. From
the comparison of the four catalysts, obviously CrVPO/α-Al2O3 (Figure b) had the biggest bare substrate, CrVPO/ZSM-5(80) (Figure d) had the smallest
packing particles; however, both CrVPO/γ-Al2O3 (Figure a)
and CrVPO/ZSM-5(50) (Figure c) apparently have moderately stacked structures. The BET
analyses in Table proved that the smallest pore size of ∼9 nm was presented
by the catalyst of CrVPO/γ-Al2O3 and CrVPO/ZSM-5,
which may be the reason for best catalytic performance of CP selectivity.
However, the relationship between catalyst performance and surface
area had no obvious correlation, and the CrVPO/γ-Al2O3 with biggest MP conversion only had the medium surface
area of 121.72 m2·g–1. Compared
with the surface area of pure γ-Al2O3 (ca.
190 m2·g–1), the surface area of
CrVPO/γ-Al2O3 decreased obviously, which
should be caused by the loading of active CrVPO components. The corresponding
N2 adsorption–desorption isotherms are shown in Figure S1.Figure showed
the EDS elemental analysis on the cross section of the best catalyst
CrVPO/γ-Al2O3. As observed in Figure a, Cr, P, and V were
well-dispersed in the catalyst inner pores, indicating that these
active components were fully transferred and diffused into the γ-Al2O3 support inner surface after ultrasonic treated
for 6 h and impregnated for at least 24 h. The atomic ratio of Cr,
V, P, O, Al was 1:0.6:0.8:6.3:4.3 (Figure b). These active components on the support
may provide a suitable dehydrogenation and oxygen supply center for
the ammonia oxidation process, which could make the catalyst show
good catalytic performance.The effect of the immersion time
and the catalyst size on the MP
conversion and CP selectivity were also investigated, and the results
are shown in Figures S2 and S3, alternatively.
According to Figure S2, when the immersion
time of the CrVPO/γ-Al2O3 catalyst increased
from 24 to 72 h, the conversion of MP increased from 62.9% to 71.5%
and then remained unchanged with the immersion time increase furthermore.
In Figure S3, the yield of CP first increased
as the catalyst particle size decreased. The highest conversion of
MP was obtained when the catalyst particle size was between 0.15 and
0.18 mm.
Effect of Reaction Temperature
The
effect of reaction temperature on the ammoxidation of MP was shown
in Figure . The CP
selectivity remained almost 90% in the temperature range from 350
to 540 °C. When the temperature was 350 °C, the conversion
of MP was only 1.5%. As the reaction temperature increased, the conversion
of MP increased rapidly. After the temperature reached 480 °C,
the conversion increase slowed down, and the selectivity of CP decreased
thereafter. At 480 °C, the CP selectivity was 93.7%, slightly
higher than that at 460 and 500 °C, and the conversion of MP
reached 71.5%.
Figure 6
Effects of reaction temperature on the CP synthesis (reaction
conditions:
CrVPO/γ-Al2O3 catalyst; feed molar ratio:
MP:H2O:NH3:O2 = 1:5:6:12; τ
= 0.004 s; mcat = 0.03g; MP flow: 0.05
mL/min, NH3 flow: 75 mL/min, O2 flow: 150 mL/min).
Effects of reaction temperature on the CP synthesis (reaction
conditions:
CrVPO/γ-Al2O3 catalyst; feed molar ratio:
MP:H2O:NH3:O2 = 1:5:6:12; τ
= 0.004 s; mcat = 0.03g; MP flow: 0.05
mL/min, NH3 flow: 75 mL/min, O2 flow: 150 mL/min).To be mentioned, the reaction temperature in our
microreactor was
higher compared with the CP-synthesizing temperature range of 320–460
°C, which were generally employed in the traditional fixed-bed
reactors by previous literature.[15,18−20,23] The MP ammoxidation reaction
has violent exothermicity and easily explodes, and it is challenging
to carry out the reaction stably at a higher temperature. However,
during the two years of our research, the reaction temperature inside
the microreactor usually varied within ±1 °C for a typical
5-h experiment. Obviously with the help of efficient heat transfer
in the microspace, the ammoxidation from MP to CP could be easily
run at a higher temperature in the specially designed microreactor.
Effect of Molar Ratio of MP to Water
For
MP ammoxidation reactions in the conventional reactors, water
vapor was essential to promote product desorption and control the
exotherm.[11] Subsequently, the influence
of water on the reaction efficiency was investigated with MP solutions
of different concentrations (molar ratio of MP to water = 1:20, 1:7,
1:5, 1:3, 1:1) as the reactants. The results are shown in Figure . It could be found
that with the increase of water in the MP solution, the CP selectivity
showed an obvious trend of first increasing and then decreasing, keeping
above 90% when the molar ratios of MP to water were 1:20, 1:7, and
1:5. The MP conversion showed the same trend but reached a maximum
value of 71.5% when the molar ratio was 1:5. It was concluded that
appropriate addition of water could help to increase the MP conversion
and the CP selectivity. Compared with the molar ratio of MP to water
used in the traditional fixed-bed reactors,[11] the optimal ratio of 1:5 in this research was lower, which suggested
that because of the higher reaction temperature and the better heat
transfer in the microreactor, less water was needed for the product
desorption and temperature control.
Figure 7
Influence of molar ratio of MP to water
on the CP synthesis (reaction
conditions: CrVPO/γ-Al2O3 catalyst; T = 480 °C; feed molar ratio: MP:H2O:NH3:O2 = 1:x:6:12; τ = 0.004
s; mcat = 0.03g; MP flow: 0.05 mL/min,
NH3 flow: 75 mL/min, O2 flow: 150 mL/min).
Influence of molar ratio of MP to water
on the CP synthesis (reaction
conditions: CrVPO/γ-Al2O3 catalyst; T = 480 °C; feed molar ratio: MP:H2O:NH3:O2 = 1:x:6:12; τ = 0.004
s; mcat = 0.03g; MP flow: 0.05 mL/min,
NH3 flow: 75 mL/min, O2 flow: 150 mL/min).Moreover, the effect of ammonia consumption on
the synthesis was
investigated by varying the feed molar ratio of MP:H2O:O2:NH3 = 1:5:12:x, taking x = 2, 4, 6, 8, 10. The result (refer to Figure S4) showed that excessive ammonia gas within a certain
range could improve the MP conversion. The molar ratio of MP:ammonia
of 1:6 was suitable for the continuous synthesis. The effect of oxygen
consumption on the synthesis was investigated by varying the feed
molar ratio of MP:H2O:NH3:O2 = 1:5:6:x, with x = 8, 10, 12, 14, 16. It could
be found in Figure S5 that when the oxygen
molar ratio increased, the conversion first increased and then decreased.
The optimal molar ratio of MP to oxygen is 1:12, obtaining the highest
MP conversion of 71.5% and the best CP selectivity of 93.7%.
Volume Space Velocity
By varying
the mass of the catalyst used in the MP ammoxidation reaction, the
effect of volume space velocity GHSV on the CP yield was investigated,
and the results are shown in Figure .
Figure 8
Effect of volume space velocity GHSV on the CP yield (reaction
conditions: T = 480 °C; feed molar ratio: MP:H2O:NH3:O2 = 1:5:6:12; τ = 0.001–0.005
s; mcat = 0.005–0.04 g; MP flow:
0.05 mL/min, NH3 flow: 75 mL/min, O2 flow: 150
mL/min).
Effect of volume space velocity GHSV on the CP yield (reaction
conditions: T = 480 °C; feed molar ratio: MP:H2O:NH3:O2 = 1:5:6:12; τ = 0.001–0.005
s; mcat = 0.005–0.04 g; MP flow:
0.05 mL/min, NH3 flow: 75 mL/min, O2 flow: 150
mL/min).From Figure , it
can be observed that the CP yield YCP decreased
when GHSV increased from 9811 h–1 to 78 491
h–1. When the catalyst mass was 0.04 g and GHSV
was 9811 h–1, the maximum reaction yield was 69.1%.
However, the GHSV of 13 081 h–1, corresponding
to a catalyst mass of 0.03 g, obviously was the turning point after
which the CP yield decreased sharply. From the relationship between
MP conversion XMP, CP selectivity SCP and GHSV in the inset, it could be seen that
the increase of GHSV leads to a decrease in XMP, which was almost in sync with the trend in YCP. The GHSV is inversely proportional to the residence
time τ. In Figure , τ had a small absolute value of only 0.001–0.005 s,
and thus, SCP did not change much. This
result revealed that at a short τ less than 0.01 s, an increase
in catalyst dosage was beneficial to improve the conversion and yield.
Importantly, a lower mass of catalyst caused a lower CP yield, and
excessive catalyst led to increasing pressure and gas obstruction.
Therefore, the optimal catalyst mass chosen for this experiment was
0.03 g, and the corresponding GHSV was 13 081 h–1.
Stability
The reaction stability
in the microreactor was explored with the continuous reaction, by
using the obtained optimal conditions (CrVPO/γ-Al2O3 catalyst particle size 0.15–0.18 mm, catalyst
mass 0.03 g, reaction temperature 480 °C, and feed molar ratio
MP:H2O:NH3:O2 = 1:5:6:12). The result
was shown in Figure . It could be found that the microreactor could be operated stably
for at least 50 h, and MP yield remains 56–68% for the whole
continuous process. This result showed that the advantages of efficient
reaction and sufficient heat removal could be maintained for the 50-h
continuous reaction process and CP could be synthesized stably and
efficiently in the microreactor.
Many researchers
had reported the ammoxidation of MP to CP in conventional fixed-bed
reactors with different catalysts, and Table compared these results and our result mainly
focusing on the catalyst loading, the residence time, and the space-time
yield. Compared to these investigations, a much shorter residence
time (0.004 s) and less catalyst loading (0.03 g) were used in our
microreactor. However, the microchannel reactor applied to the ammoxidation
of MP has obtained a space-time yield of at least 1724 gCPkgcat–1h–1, which
is nearly twice as large as the space-time yield of 440–900
gCPkgcat–1h–1 in the conventional fixed-bed reactor. And the highest space-time
yield reached 77 082 gCPkgcat–1h–1 in this work. It was obvious that the ammoxidation
from MP to CP could be much more efficiently carried out in the microreactor
than in regular reactors.
Table 2
Comparison of the
Catalytic Ammoxidation
from MP to CP among Different Investigations
reactor
mcat
τ
XMP
SCP
YCP
STYCP
ref
FBR
3 g
1.7 s
∼65%
∼100%
∼65%
38–498 gCP/(kgcat·h)
(15)
FBR
3 g
1.7 s
∼20%
∼100%
∼20%
45–153 gCP/(kgcat·h)
(16)
FBR
5 g
2.8 s
∼90%
∼65%
∼58%
13–266 gCP/(kgcat·h)
(18)
FBR
1 g
/
∼100%
∼70%
∼69%
/
(19)
FBR
1 g
0.37 s
∼100%
∼70%
∼70%
138–440 gCP/(kgcat·h)
(20)
FBR
1
g
/
∼75%
∼66%
∼50%
/
(21)
FBR
1 g
/
∼100%
∼85%
∼85%
/
(22)
FBR
1 g
0.3 s
∼100%
∼86%
∼86%
500–900 gCP/(kgcat·h)
(23)
FBR
1 g
/
∼69%
∼98%
∼67%
/
(24)
MR
0.03 g
0.001–0.005 s
∼71%
∼97%
∼70%
1724–77 082 gCP/(kgcat·h)
this work
Conclusions
The continuous-flow ammoxidation reaction of 2-methylpyrazine (MP)
to 2-cyanopyrazine (CP) with high space-time yield was achieved at
350 °C ∼ 540 °C by a sinusoidal wave microreactor.
By simply piled in the central sinusoidal microgroove, CrVPO catalysts
with four supports (α-Al2O3, γ-Al2O3, ZSM-5(50), ZSM-5(80)) were screened and the
optimal CrVPO/γ-Al2O3 was selected to
obtain the optimal reaction conditions by conditional experiments.
The optimal result showed that under a tiny catalyst dose of 0.03
g and the optimal feed molar ratio of 1:5:6:12 (MP:H2O:
NH3:O2), the best MP conversion and CP selectivity
at 480 °C reached 71.5% and 93.7%, respectively. The highest
space-time yield of 1724–77 082 gCPkgcat–1h–1, to our best knowledge,
was achieved, which was 1.9–85 times of the best result reported
by a traditional fixed-bed reactor in 2016.[23] Heat intensification was with good control in the sinusoidal wave
microreactor and the temperature at the central reaction site varied
within ±1 °C for a typical 5-h experiment. The ammoxidation
reaction could run stably in the microreactor for at least 50 h with
the CP yield remaining 56% ∼ 68%. The results provided a promising
approach for ammoxidation reaction to synthesis cyano-containing compounds
efficiently and safely.