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Reppe acrylic esters synthesis

Norbomadiene may be carbonylated essentially under the conditions of Reppe s acrylic ester synthesis. Cycloheptenecarboboxylates (XVIII)... [Pg.380]

Acrylic ester synthesis from acetylene, carbon monoxide, and alcohols with the aid of nickel carbonyl is known as the Reppe synthesis and is very important in industrial applications (Reppe, 1953). This carboxylation re-... [Pg.170]

Substitution of an hazardous chemical is often an even more complex problem, in particular regarding the trade-off between inherently safer design and sustainable chemistry. Several examples are discussed in subsequent chapters. We thus limit our discussion here to a few aspects. Up until around the 1960s the Reppe process was employed for of synthesis of acrylic esters ... [Pg.51]

Walter Reppe also used his new base to expand the chemistry of acetylene. His first major breakthrough, in the summer of 1939, was the addition of carbon monoxide to acetylene in the presence of alcohols (or water) and a nickel catalyst to form acrylates. Carbon monoxide had attracted attention for many years as a readily available, cheap and reactive carbon compound. I.G. Farben employed it in the Pier methanol synthesis, Ruhrchemie used it in the Fischer-Tropsch synthetic petrol process, and Du Pont had carried out research on the addition of carbon monoxide to olefins at very high pressure and temperatures. Additional impetus for the use of carbon monoxide in acetylene chemistry was provided by the introduction of covered carbide furnaces at I.G. Farben s Knapsack plant in 1938, which permitted the collection of by-product carbon monoxide. The polymers of acrylic esters were already used for treating leather and for paint, but acrylic acid was made from ethylene oxide, and consequently was rather expensive. Reppe s process reached the pilot plant stage by 1945, and was subsequently used on a large scale by BASF and its American partners. [Pg.116]

Acetylene-Based Routes. Walter Reppe, the father of modem acetylene chemistry, discovered the reaction of nickel carbonyl with acetylene and water or alcohols to give acryUc acid or esters (75,76). This discovery led to several processes which have been in commercial use. The original Reppe reaction requires a stoichiometric ratio of nickel carbonyl to acetylene. The Rohm and Haas modified or semicatalytic process provides 60—80% of the carbon monoxide from a separate carbon monoxide feed and the remainder from nickel carbonyl (77—78). The reactions for the synthesis of ethyl acrylate are... [Pg.155]


See other pages where Reppe acrylic esters synthesis is mentioned: [Pg.113]   
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