Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Energy cumene synthesis

The three-step cumene process, including the liquid-phase reactions and using sulfuric acid, is energy-consuming, environmentally unfavorable and disadvantageous for practical operation the process also produces as an unnecessary byproduct acetone, stoichiometrically. Furthermore, the intermediate, cumene hydroperoxide, is explosive and cannot be concentrated in the final step, resulting in a low one-path phenol yield, ( 5%, based on the amount of benzene initially used). Thus, direct phenol synthesis from benzene in one-step reaction with high... [Pg.401]

This case study deals with the design and simulation of a medium size plant of lOOkton cumene per year. The goal is performing the design by two essentially different methods. The first one is a classical approach, which handles the process synthesis and energy saving with distinct reaction and separation sections. In the second alternative a more innovative technology is applied based on reactive distillation. [Pg.173]

The catalytic work on the zeolites has been carried out using the pulse microreactor technique (4) on the following reactions cracking of cumene, isomerization of 1-butene to 2-butene, polymerization of ethylene, equilibration of hydrogen-deuterium gas, and the ortho-para hydrogen conversion. These reactions were studied as a function of replacement of sodium by ammonium ion and subsequent heat treatment of the material (3). Furthermore, in some cases a surface titration of the catalytic sites was used to determine not only the number of sites but also the activity per site. Measurements at different temperatures permitted the determination of the absolute rate at each temperature with subsequent calculation of the activation energy and the entropy factor. For cumene cracking, the number of active sites was found to be equal to the number of sodium ions replaced in the catalyst synthesis by ammonium ions up to about 50% replacement. This proved that the active sites were either Bronsted or Lewis acid sites or both. Physical defects such as strains in the crystals were thus eliminated and the... [Pg.136]


See other pages where Energy cumene synthesis is mentioned: [Pg.32]    [Pg.465]    [Pg.137]    [Pg.298]    [Pg.77]    [Pg.80]    [Pg.333]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.189 , Pg.194 ]




SEARCH



Cumene

Cumene synthesis

Cumenes

© 2024 chempedia.info