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Halcon International

It is carried out in the Hquid phase at 100—130°C and catalyzed by a soluble molybdenum naphthenate catalyst, also in a series of reactors with interreactor coolers. The dehydration of a-phenylethanol to styrene takes place over an acidic catalyst at about 225°C. A commercial plant (50,51) was commissioned in Spain in 1973 by Halcon International in a joint venture with Enpetrol based on these reactions, in a process that became known as the Oxirane process, owned by Oxirane Corporation, a joint venture of ARCO and Halcon International. Oxirane Corporation merged into ARCO in 1980 and this process is now generally known as the ARCO process. It is used by ARCO at its Channelview, Texas, plant and in Japan and Korea in joint ventures with local companies. A similar process was developed by Shell (52—55) and commercialized in 1979 at its Moerdijk plant in the Netherlands. The Shell process uses a heterogeneous catalyst of titanium oxide on siHca support in the epoxidation step. Another plant by Shell is under constmction in Singapore (ca 1996). [Pg.484]

Halcon (1) Halcon International (later The Halcon SD Group) designed many organic chemical processes, but is perhaps best known for its process for making phenol from cyclohexane. Cyclohexane is first oxidized to cyclohexanol, using air as the oxidant and boric acid as the catalyst, and this is then dehydrogenated to phenol. Invented in 1961 by S. N. Fox and J. W. Colton, it was operated by Monsanto in Australia for several years. [Pg.122]

Halcon (2) A process for oxidizing ethylene to ethylene oxide, using atmospheric oxygen, and catalyzed by silver. Developed by Halcon International in the late 1940s and early 1950s and first commercialized at Lavera, France. See Halcon (1). [Pg.122]

Mid-Century Also called M-C. A process for oxidizing p-xylene to terephthalic acid, using oxygen in acetic acid and catalyzed by a mixture of cobalt and manganese bromides. Developed in the 1950s by Halcon International and commercialized by Standard Oil Company (Indiana). The first plant was built at Jolet, IA, in 1938. The Amoco and Maruzen processes are improved versions. [Pg.177]

Halcon International), U.S. Patent (Halcon International), U.S. Patent... [Pg.76]


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