Kinetics of phenol hydroxylation reaction of open mesoporous TS-1 with high backbone titanium content
Author:
Wang Shuai12, Yang Zhenyuan23, Xu Lei2, Wang Na14, Mu Shenglong14, Jiao Yilai2
Affiliation:
1. 1 Liaoning Provincial key Laboratory for Synthesis and Preparation of Special Functional Materials , Shenyang University of Chemical Technology , Shenyang , Liaoning , , China . 2. 2 Shenyang National Laboratory for Materials Science , Institute of Metal Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences , Shenyang , Liaoning , , China . 3. 3 School of Materials Science and Engineering , University of Science and Technology of China , Shenyang , Liaoning , , China . 4. 4 Shenyang Key Laboratory for New Functional Coating Materials , Shenyang University of Chemical Technology , Shenyang , Liaoning , , China .
Abstract
Abstract
High skeletal titanium content, open mesoporous TS-1 titanosilica molecular sieves with more accessible active centres exhibit higher catalytic activity, target product selectivity and resistance to coking deactivation in green catalytic oxidation reactions using hydrogen peroxide as oxidant. In this paper, TS-1 titania-silica molecular sieves without anatase, with the highest theoretical skeletal titanium content (2.0 wt%) and open mesopores (mesopore volume 0.71 cm3/g) were synthesised based on the ageing dry gel limited domain conversion method invented in previous research work. The intrinsic kinetics of the catalytic reaction of phenol with hydrogen peroxide for direct hydroxylation of benzenes was investigated. The effects of stirring rate, phenol concentration, hydrogen peroxide concentration, catalyst dosage and reaction temperature on the initial conversion rate of phenol were investigated, and the experimental data were fitted with a power function equation to obtain the intrinsic kinetic equation of the catalyst
(
r
=
2.98
×
10
6
exp
(
−
56.43
×
10
3
R
T
)
c
1.07
(
Phenol
)
c
0.10
(
H
2
O
2
)
)
\left( {{\rm{r}} = 2.98 \times {{10}^6}\,\exp \,\left( { - {{56.43 \times {{10}^3}} \over {RT}}} \right){c^{1.07}}\left( {{\rm{Phenol}}} \right){c^{0.10}}\left( {{{\rm{H}}_2}{{\rm{O}}_2}} \right)} \right)
. Under the condition of eliminating the effect of internal and external diffusion, the reaction was 1.07 and 0.10 for phenol and hydrogen peroxide, respectively, with a reaction activation energy of 56.43 kJ/mol. This study provides a theoretical basis for the reactor and process design of hydroxylation of phenol to benzenediol based on this new catalyst.
Publisher
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Subject
Applied Mathematics,Engineering (miscellaneous),Modeling and Simulation,General Computer Science
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