posted on 2016-04-27, 00:00authored byCesar A. de Araujo
Filho, Kari Eränen, Jyri-Pekka Mikkola, Tapio Salmi
The present work
provides a systematic comparison of solvent-free glycerol hydrochlorination
with semibatch and reactive flash distillation technologies. All the
experiments were performed at atmospheric pressure and constant flow
rate of gaseous HCl in the temperature range of 70 to 120 °C.
Both acetic acid and adipic acid were used as homogeneous catalysts,
separately, at a concentration of 12% by moles of each. In addition,
a series of noncatalytic experiments was investigated. A comparative
analysis between reactive flash distillation and semibatch operation
suggested that reactive flash distillation only increases the production
rate of the desired product 1,3-dichloropropan-2-ol (αγ-DCP)
for the highest temperature, i.e. 120 °C. Many aspects of the
HCl liquid uptake were also exposed once water was allowed to leave
the liquid phase, revealing that water also has a positive influence
on the reaction rate because it promotes HCl solubility and hydrolysis.
Such an important effect was not predicted by previous investigations,
and it is hereby described for the first time. Additional semibatch
experiments were conducted, in which different amounts of water and
αγ-DCP were initially added. It was found that, water
exerts competing effects in the glycerol hydrochlorination; addition
of αγ-DCP showed an improvement of the reaction kinetics
and decrease of HCl consumption. It is suggested that instead of using
reactive distillation, a wiser choice to perform glycerol hydrochlorination
would be to recycle large amounts of the product stream to achieve
high conversion levels at milder temperatures and consuming less HCl
gas.