Hydrocarbon, alcohol and/or ketone oxidation method

Organic compounds -- part of the class 532-570 series – Organic compounds – Carboxylic acids and salts thereof

Reexamination Certificate

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C562S543000, C562S418000, C562S527000, C562S539000, C562S523000, C554S134000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06762319

ABSTRACT:

The present invention relates to the oxidation, by means of oxygen or a gas containing it, of hydrocarbons to the corresponding carboxylic acids, alcohols and/or ketones or of alcohols and/or ketones to the corresponding carboxylic acids.
The direct oxidation using oxygen of hydrocarbons, more particularly cycloalkanes, in the presence of a catalyst is a process which has been the subject of study for a long time. Indeed, there would be obvious advantages in avoiding the use of an oxidizing agent such as nitric acid, as is used in one of the steps of the current industrial processes, which would do away with the need to treat the oxides of nitrogen that are generated.
In the numerous variants of a catalytic oxidation process of this kind using oxygen, cobalt is the catalyst most frequently recommended.
For instance, the American patent U.S. Pat. No. 2,223,493, published in December 1940, describes the oxidation of cyclic hydrocarbons to the corresponding diacids in a liquid phase generally comprising acetic acid at a temperature of at least 60° C. with the aid of a gas containing oxygen and in the presence of an oxidation catalyst such as a cobalt compound.
The American patent U.S. Pat. No. 4,902,827, published in February 1990, describes an improvement to the air oxidation of cyclohexane to adipic acid in a liquid phase comprising acetic acid at a temperature of from 80° C. to 160° C. and in the presence of an oxidation catalyst comprising a soluble compound of cobalt and a soluble compound of zirconium and/or of hafnium.
More recently, the patent EP-A-0 694 333 has recommended the employment, in the context of the oxidation of hydrocarbons using oxygen, of a catalyst comprising a cobaltic salt and a ferric salt.
As another customary catalyst of this oxidation reaction mention may be made of manganese.
On economic grounds, and also to facilitate the purification of the resultant products, it is preferable to operate with the lowest possible catalyst concentration. Therefore, manganese is an advantageous catalyst in cyclohexane oxidation processes.
It is found, however, that the selectivities obtained with the catalyst systems used in the prior art processes described above are still in need of improvement.
The present invention aims to provide such improvement. It consists more precisely in a process for oxidizing hydrocarbon, alcohol and/or ketone, using oxygen or a gas containing it, in liquid phase and in the presence of a catalyst dissolved in the reaction medium, characterized in that the catalyst comprises at least one soluble manganese compound and at least one soluble chromium compound.
The hydrocarbons which are used as starting substrates in the process of the invention are more particularly alkanes, cycloalkanes, alkylaromatic hydrocarbons, alkenes and cycloalkanes having 3 to 20 carbon atoms.
Among these hydrocarbons the cycloalkanes, especially those which have a ring containing 5 to 12 carbon atoms, are without doubt the most important, since their oxidation leads to the dicarboxylic acids or to the intermediate cycloalkanols and cycloalkanones.
The hydrocarbon of greatest interest is cyclohexane, whose oxidation leads to adipic acid, one of the starting compounds for nylon 6,6, but which may also provide cyclohexanone, which leads to caprolactam and thus to nylon 6.
The present process can also be used for the oxidation of intermediate alcohols or ketones, especially cycloalkanols and cycloalkanones having 5 to 12 carbon atoms, to prepare the corresponding dicarboxylic acids. In the text below, the process will be more particularly described for the oxidation of hydrocarbons, essentially cycloalkanes, and, with special preference, for the oxidation of cyclohexane.
The catalyst system comprising compounds of manganese and of chromium makes it possible to prepare adipic acid directly with a good selectivity from the oxidation of cyclohexane; this feature is obviously highly advantageous.
The catalyst system comprises at least one manganese compound which is soluble in the reaction medium, selected for example, nonlimitatively, from manganese chloride, manganese bromide, manganese nitrate and manganese carboxylates such as manganese acetate tetrahydrate, manganese propionate, manganese adipate, manganese glutarate and manganese succinate.
The catalyst further comprises at least one chromium compound which is soluble in the reaction medium, selected for example, nonlimitatively, from chromium chloride, chromium bromide, chromium nitrate and chromium carboxylates such as chromium acetate, chromium propionate, chromium adipate, chromium glutarate and chromium succinate.
Finally, the catalyst may further comprise at least one compound of zirconium and/or of hafnium which is soluble in the reaction medium, selected for example, nonlimitatively, from zirconium chloride, zirconium bromide, zirconium nitrate and zirconium carboxylates such as zirconium acetate, zirconium propionate, zirconium adipate, zirconium glutarate and zirconium succinate and hafnium chloride, hafnium bromide, hafnium nitrate and hafnium carboxylates such as hafnium acetate, hafnium propionate, hafnium adipate, hafnium glutarate and hafnium succinate.
The molar ratios between the chromium and the manganese in the catalyst system can vary within wide limits. Thus it is possible to employ Cr/Mn molar ratios of advantageously between 0.00001 and 100, preferably between 0.001 and 10.
The amount of zirconium, when present, can vary within molar ratios, relative to the manganese, which are similar to those indicated above for chromium.
The catalyst can be obtained in situ by charging the manganese, chromium and, optionally, zirconium compounds to the reaction medium. It can also be prepared at the time of use by mixing the said compounds in the proportions necessary to obtain the desired Cr/Mn and, optionally, Zr/Mn molar ratios. This mixing is preferably carried out using a solvent, advantageously a solvent of the same kind as that used for the oxidation reaction, or directly in this solvent.
The amount of catalyst, expressed as a weight percentage of elemental manganese, chromium and, optionally, zirconium relative to the reaction mixture, is situated generally between 0.0001 and 5%, advantageously between 0.001 and 1%, although these values are not critical. What is important, however, is to have a sufficient activity but without using excessive amounts. The reason for this is that the catalyst will have to be separated from the final reaction medium and recycled.
It is advantageous to employ further an initiator compound for the oxidation reaction. The initiators are often hydroperoxides, such as for example cyclohexyl hydroperoxide or tert-butyl hydroperoxide. Further initiators are ketones or aldehydes, such as for example cyclohexanone, which is one of the compounds formed during the oxidation of cyclohexane or acetaldehyde. In general, the initiator represents from 0.01% to 20% by weight of the weight of the reaction mixture employed, although these proportions are not critical. The initiator is used above all at the time of starting the oxidation and when the oxidation of cyclohexane is carried out at a temperature lower than 120° C. It can be introduced from the beginning of the reaction.
The liquid reaction medium preferably contains an at least partial solvent for the carboxylic acid and/or alcohol and/or ketone which it is envisaged to prepare by employing the process of the invention. This solvent can be highly variable in nature, provided that it is not substantially oxidizable under the reaction conditions. It can be selected in particular from polar protic solvents and polar aprotic solvents. As polar protic solvents mention may be made, for example, of carboxylic acids having only primary or secondary hydrogen atoms, especially aliphatic acids having 2 to 9 carbon atoms, perfluoroalkylcarboxylic acids such as trifluoroacetic acid, and alcohols such as tert-butanol. As polar aprotic solvents mention may be made, for example, of lower alkyl (=alkyl radical having 1 to 4 carbon atom

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