March 27, 2012
Journal Article

Solvent Effects in the Hydrogenation of 2-Butanone

Abstract

In liquid-phase reaction systems, the role of the solvent is often limited to the simple requirement of dissolving and/or diluting substrates. However, the correct choice, either pure or mixed, can significantly influence both reaction rate and selectivity. For multi-phase heterogeneously catalysed reactions observed variations may be due to changes in mass transfer rates, reaction mechanism, reaction kinetics, adsorption properties and combinations thereof. The liquid-phase hydrogenation of 2-butanone to 2- butanol over a Ru/SiO2 catalyst, for example, shows such complex rate behaviour when varying water/isopropyl alcohol (IPA) solvent ratios. In this paper, we outline a strategy which combines measured rate data with physical property measurements and molecular simulation in order to gain a more fundamental understanding of mixed solvent effects for this heterogeneously catalysed reaction. By combining these techniques, the observed complex behaviour of rate against water fraction is shown to be a combination of both mass transfer and chemical effects.

Revised: October 15, 2012 | Published: March 27, 2012

Citation

Akpa B.S., C. DAgostino, L.F. Gladden, K. Hindle, H. Manyar, J. McGregor, and R. Li, et al. 2012. Solvent Effects in the Hydrogenation of 2-Butanone. Journal of Catalysis 289. doi:10.1016/j.jcat.2012.01.011