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Selective vapor‐phase oxidation of o ‐xylene to phthalic anhydride over Co‐Mn/H 3 PW 12 O 40 @TiO 2 using molecular oxygen as a green oxidant
Author(s) -
Masoomi Kianoosh,
Ghiaci Mehran,
Botelho do Rego A.M.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
applied organometallic chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.53
H-Index - 71
eISSN - 1099-0739
pISSN - 0268-2605
DOI - 10.1002/aoc.4461
Subject(s) - phthalic anhydride , chemistry , catalysis , o xylene , xylene , space velocity , phthalic acid , inorganic chemistry , nuclear chemistry , organic chemistry , selectivity , benzene
The oxidation of o ‐xylene to phthalic anhydride over Co‐Mn/H 3 PW 12 O 40 @TiO 2 was investigated. The experimental results demonstrated that the prepared catalyst effectively catalyzed the oxidation of o ‐xylene to phthalic anhydride. Also, the synergistic effect between three metals plays vital roles in this reaction. From a green chemistry point of view, this method is environmentally friendly due to carrying out the oxidation in a fixed‐bed reactor under solvent‐free condition and using molecular oxygen as a green and cheap oxidizing agent. The resulting solid catalysts were characterized by FT‐IR, XRD, XPS, ICP‐OES, FESEM, TEM, EDX, DR‐UV spectroscopy, BET and thermogravimetric analysis. The oxidation of o ‐xylene yields four products: o ‐tolualdehyde, phthaldialdehyde, phthalide and finally phthalic anhydride as the main product. The reaction conditions for oxidation of o ‐xylene were optimized by varying the temperature, weight hourly space velocity and oxygen flow rate (contact time). The optimum weight percentage of phosphotungstic acid (HPW) and Co/Mn for phthalic anhydride production were 15 wt % and 2 wt%, respectively. The best Co/Mn ratio was found to be 10/1. Oxygen flow rate was very important on the phthalic anhydride formation. The optimum conditions for oxidation of o ‐xylene were T = 370 °C, WHSV = 0.5 h −1 and oxygen flow rate = 10 mL min −1 . Under optimized conditions, a maximum of 88.2% conversion and 75.5% selectivity to phthalic anhydride was achieved with the fresh catalyst. Moreover, reusability of the catalyst was studied and catalytic activity remained unchanged after at least five cycles.