Green Process Design for Reductive Hydroformylation of Renewable Olefin Cuts for Drop-In Diesel Fuels.
Sebastian PüschelSven StörtteJohanna TopphoffAndreas J VorholtWalter LeitnerPublished in: ChemSusChem (2021)
CO2 -neutral fuels are a way to cleaner and more sustainable mobility. Utilization of bio-syngas via Fischer-Tropsch (FT) synthesis represents an interesting route for the production of tailormade biofuels. Recent developments in FT catalyst research led to olefin-enriched products, enabling the synthesis of alcohol-enriched fuels by reductive hydroformylation of the C=C bond. Several alcohols have already proven to be suitable fuel additives with favorable combustion behavior. Here, a hydroformylation-hydrogenation sequence of FT-olefin-paraffin mixtures was investigated as a potential route to alcohols. A liquid-liquid biphasic system with a rhodium/3,3',3''-phosphanetriyltris(benzenesulfonic acid) trisodium salt (TPPTS) catalyst system was chosen for effective catalyst recycling. After optimizing reaction conditions with a model substrate consisting of 1-octene and n-heptane the conversion of an actual olefin-containing C5 -C10 FT product fraction to alcohols in continuously operated processes for 37 h was achieved with a total turnover number of 23679.