Bisphenol production

Organic compounds -- part of the class 532-570 series – Organic compounds – Oxygen containing

Reexamination Certificate

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C422S140000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06723885

ABSTRACT:

BISPHENOL PRODUCTION
The invention concerns a process for the efficient production of highly pure bisphenols.
Bisphenols are important raw materials for the manufacture of polymers such as epoxy resins and particularly polycarbonates. High standards are set for the purity of bisphenols for use in this application, such that particular importance is attached to the reprocessing stages as well as to the achievement of high yields and selectivities in economic industrial-scale production processes.
According to essentially known processes, bisphenols are produced by the condensation of carbonyl compounds with aromatic alcohols in the presence of acid catalysts. A process for the technically important production of 2,2-bis(4-hydroxyphenyl)propane (BPA) comprises the reaction of acetone and phenol in the presence of cross-linked sulfonated polystyrene resins (ion exchanger resins). A phenol/acetone ratio of at least 5:1 is used here. Co-catalysts are used to obtain high selectivities; these are either dissolved homogeneously into the reactants or are fixed to the ion exchanger resin by means of covalent or ionic bonds.
The object is to separate from BPA by appropriate means the by-products that are generated in the above process for the production of BPA and to remove all residues of excess phenol from the product. The side streams generated by these measures should further be recycled in the overall process by economic means.
As a means of achieving these objects, the isolation of BPA-phenol adduct crystals from the reaction solution by suspension crystallisation with or without prior distillation is described in the literature (EP-A-829464), whereby the highly phenolic parent liquor produced during filtration of the adduct crystals, optionally after inclusion of a rearrangement reaction, is returned upstream of the reaction unit and supplemented with fresh phenol and acetone. The disadvantage of this procedure lies in the generation of large recycle streams in the process and the contamination of the catalyst bed by the return of the highly contaminated parent liquor stream.
In order to circumvent this problem, methods have been proposed that avoid the need for adduct crystallisation with the associated generation of a parent liquor circuit. EP-A-758637 describes the production of BPA by reprocessing the reaction stream in a cascade of purification stages by means of distillation, whereby the reaction stream is purified without generating back flows of acetone, water, phenol and by-products. The disadvantages of this process are the exposure of the product to high temperatures during distillation, the high energy costs involved in the distillation cascade and the substantial raw material loss resulting from dispensing with the rearrangement and recycling of the minor constituents.
In EP-A-785181 the reaction solution is likewise reprocessed without adduct crystallisation by means of vacuum distillation to remove acetone, water, phenol and optionally minor constituents, followed by melt crystallisation. In this process too, raw material losses have to be accepted as a consequence of dispensing with the recycling of BPA-containing by-product streams generated during purification.
The process according to the invention for the production and reprocessing of BPA circumvents the disadvantages described above in that the reaction mixture is purified by means of vacuum distillation, following which it undergoes layer crystallisation and the by-product streams are recycled. Highly pure BPA can be produced with the process according to the invention. The return of the by-product stream downstream of the production unit ensures that the catalyst in the reaction unit is not contaminated by recycled by-products.
The present invention thus provides a process for the production of 2,2-bis(4-hydroxyphenyl)propane (BPA) by reaction of acetone and phenol in the presence of cross-linked sulfonated polystyrene resins (ion exchanger resins), characterised in that BPA is separated from the reaction solution downstream of the reaction unit
a) by means of a multi-stage vacuum distillation and
b) a subsequent single- or multi-stage layer crystallisation,
c) and the by-product stream with accumulated by-products is returned downstream of the reaction unit.
The process according to the invention is illustrated in greater detail in the process diagram FIG.
1
.
(1) represents a reaction unit in which phenol, acetone with a phenol/acetone ratio of at least 5:1, preferably at least 10:1, are added at a temperature of 40 to 110° C., preferably 45 to 70° C., to an ion exchanger catalyst system consisting of a sulfonated cross-linked polystyrene.
The ion exchanger catalyst system is preferably modified with either a covalently or ionically bonded mercapto compound.
The reaction unit may be and is preferably a layered bed or fluidised bed, with upflow or downflow operation, or a column of the reactive distillation column type.
The reaction stream (reaction solution) leaving the reaction unit (1) contains unreacted phenol and acetone, together with water, BPA and the minor constituents typically generated during the reaction, such as o,p-BPA, indanes, chromanes and more highly condensed reaction products with three or more aromatic nuclei.
The reaction is conducted such that the reaction mixture leaving the reaction unit (1) displays 70 to 95 wt. %, preferably 75 to 90 wt. % phenol; 0 to 4 wt. %, preferably 0.1 to 1.0 wt. % acetone; 0.1 to 4 wt. %, preferably 0.5 to 2.0 wt. % water; 5 to 30 wt. %, preferably 10 to 25 wt. % p,p-BPA and 0 to 3 wt. %, preferably 0.1 to 1.5 wt. % by-products.
This reaction stream is fed to a cascade of two distillation columns (2) and (3). In distillation column (2) water and acetone are removed from the reaction stream to leave a residual content of no more than 0.1 wt. % respectively.
In the second distillation column (3) phenol is then separated off to leave a residual content of no more than 25 wt. %, preferably no more than 10 wt. %, particularly preferably no more than 5%. The separated phenol is preferably returned to the reaction unit (1).
The remaining reaction stream containing minor constituents and residual phenol in addition to BPA is fed to a crystallisation unit (4). In the crystallisation unit (4) crystallisation is performed as layer crystallisation on cooled surfaces in a melt crystallisation apparatus, with continuous or batchwise operation, at temperatures of 125 to 160° C., preferably 140 to 160° C. The crystallisation may be performed as a static process or in the form of a falling-film crystallisation.
This procedure concentrates BPA and depletes the by-products and phenol. The content of phenol and of by-products was reduced in the crystallisation unit (4) by around 80% in each case as compared with the quantities present prior to entering the crystallisation unit (4).
On completion of crystal growth, the BPA crystals formed are isolated by draining off the liquid parent liquor. This is optionally followed by a further purification of the crystals, possibly and preferably by passing them through a temperature gradient by sweating. The crystals are then liquefied by raising the temperature above the melting point and drained into a collecting tank for further processing.
The BPA obtained after the crystallisation unit (4) can optionally be freed from any remaining phenol and/or minor constituents in a second unit (5). The unit (5) is preferably operated in the same way as the crystallisation unit (4). Purification may also be performed by distillation and/or desorption, however.
The by-product stream obtained in the crystallisation unit (4) and optionally (5), containing BPA, phenol and concentrated minor constituents, is returned upstream of the second distillation column (3), whereby part of the (by-)product (BPA resin) can be removed from the system to prevent an accumulation of minor constituents in the circuit.
Before being fed into the distillation column (3), the by-product stream is preferably passed through a rearrangement reactor (6), which is filled

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