1 / 20

Principles of Flow Chemistry

Principles of Flow Chemistry. Overview. What is flow chemistry? Flow Chemistry vs Batch Chemistry Key principles of Flow Chemistry Residence Time Mixing Pressure Temperature Types of Flow Chemistry Summary. ~1950. ~1920. ~1750. Labs in the past!. New labs – same equipment

josephdion
Download Presentation

Principles of Flow Chemistry

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Principles of Flow Chemistry

  2. Overview • What is flow chemistry? • Flow Chemistry vs Batch Chemistry • Key principles of Flow Chemistry • Residence Time • Mixing • Pressure • Temperature • Types of Flow Chemistry • Summary

  3. ~1950 ~1920 ~1750 Labs in the past! • New labs – same equipment • Focus has been on new reactions, new chemistries. • New equipment only designed to solve “non-reaction” steps: • Flash chromatography • Evaporation • Reactor automation

  4. What is flow chemistry? • In flow chemistry, reagents are continuously pumped through the reactor and the product is continuously collected. A C B

  5. Reagent A Reagent B Reagent A ~100µm Reaction Mixture Reaction Mixture Reagent B >5mm Batch and flow • Classic way to do chemistry. • Reagents are loaded into the reactor, mixed and left to react. • The products is collected at the end, after the reaction has been completed and worked-up. . • New technique. • Reagents streams are continuously pumped into the flow reactor. • Reagents mix and react in the flow reactor. • The product leaves the reactor as a continuous stream. • Key factors: • Concentration • Mixing • Temperature • Reaction time • Key factors: • Residence time (flow rates) • Mixing • Pressure • Temperature

  6. Key Principles of Flow Chemistry • Residence Time • Mixing • Pressure • Temperature

  7. Residence time • It can be defined as the time that every fraction of the reaction volume spends in the reactor • Residence time is equivalent to reaction time in batch chemistry. • It is calculated as follows: Two ways of controlling the residence time: • Vary the reactor volume. • Vary the flow rates. Example: to achieve a longer residence time, it is possible to either pump more slowly and/or use a reactor with a larger volume. Residence Time = Reactor Volume / Flow Rate

  8. Worked example: Residence time Residence Time = Reactor Volume / Flow Rate Example: 2 reagents flowing into a 1 mL glass microreactor at 0.25 mL/min flow rate each. • What is the residence time? To change the residence time to 8 min. • What are the two options? Combined flow rate = 0.25 + 0.25 = 0.5 mL/min Residence time = 1/0.5 = 2 min Slow flow rates to 0.0625 mL/min each. Increase the reactor volume to 4 mL.

  9. Mixing • In batch chemistry, mixing is turbulent • In flow chemistry, the mixing can be turbulent or laminar • Small tube diameter results in laminar flow conditions (Reynolds number Re<2500) • Radial diffusion

  10. Reservoir Pump Reservoir Pump Mixing • In turbulent flow conditions, static mixers are used to increase mass transfer • In laminar flow conditions, mixing occurs by diffusion • Diffusion time is proportional to distance squared, therefore over short distances, diffusion is rapid

  11. Pressure • In a flow reactor the total pressure at any location is made up of two factors: • Back pressure due to flow • This increases with higher flow rate, narrower channels or more viscous liquid • Back pressure intentionally applied • This is typically applied by a pressure regulator near the exit of the system • Bubbles are best avoided as they can “push out” the reaction, thus lowering the residence time • Flow reactors can be easily pressurised (much easier than a batch reaction) • This can be useful for a variety of reasons: • Reactions with gas • Avoiding cavitation • Superheating

  12. Temperature • Due to a higher surface area:volume ratio, flow reactors enable better heat transfer and therefore better temperature control • Reactions cool down or heat up extremely rapidly (faster than a microwave) • By pressurising, flow reactors can operate at temperatures above the typical boiling point of reactions • This enables easy superheating of reactions e.g. 100ºC to 150ºC above reflux temperatures at atmospheric pressure

  13. Different types of flow chemistry • Homogeneous flow chemistry: • Monophasic liquid-liquid reactions • Biphasic liquid-liquid reactions (link to video) • Two-phase microfluidic flows, Chemical Engineering Science 66 (2011) 1394 • Heterogeneous flow chemistry: • Solid-liquid reactions • Gas-liquid reactions • Gas-solid-liquid reactions

  14. Liquid-Liquid Interactions • BatchFlow • Flow Chemistry is ideal for biphasic liquid reactions • Flow Chemistry is very suitable for aqueous work-up

  15. Solids • Solids in flow reactors can in some instances cause problems such as blockages • The ability for flow reactors to tolerate solids varies greatly • Higher ratio between channel diameter and particle size, the lower probability of a blockage • Other factors such as the nature of the particle, reactor design and velocity of the reaction can all influence the likelihood of a blockage • The use of solid reagents is typically easiest by isolating them in a “column” and flowing the reaction in solution through the packed column • Solution to solids issues is often a chemistry solution (and not a technology solution): • Adapt the chemistry • Add co-solvents to increase solubility of products • Reduce concentrations of reaction • Examples of solids produced in Syrris flow chemistry systems (link to Asia Nanoparticle video):

  16. What is the potential of flow chemistry?

  17. Prof. Steve Ley’s paper • 7 flow steps • Mix of homogeneous and heterogeneous reactions including gas phase • Synthesis, evaporation and workup all in flow • Overall yield 40%

  18. Ring formations Grubbs ring forming Ugi followed by ring closure to benzimidazole Diels Alder 1,3,4 Oxadiazole formation Fischer indole synthesis 1,3 Thiazole formation Pyrazole formation Oxidations and reductions Borohydride reduction Borane reduction of a heterocycle Reductive amination Dess Martin alcohol oxidation Homogeneous catalysis Suzuki reaction Heck reaction Grubbs ring forming Multicomponent reactions Passerini 3CR Biginelli 3CR Ugi 4CR Deprotection chemistry BOC deprotection MOM deprotection and intra epoxide opening Ester saponification Examples of Syrris flow Chemistry General Synthesis • Aldol reaction • Biphasic Schotten-Baumann • HBTU amide coupling • Elimination of an alcohol to alkene • Esterification of an alcohol • Wittig reaction • Nucleophilic aromatic substitution • SN1 reaction • Mitsunobu reaction • N-Alkylation

  19. Summary • Flow chemistry is an exciting new tool for chemists. • Reaction conditions: flow rates ratio, residence time, temperature. • Variable parameters: flow rates, reactor volume, temperature • The technology is growing fast. • Later today you get a chance to see/use the most advanced flow chemistry systems available. Residence Time = Reactor Volume / Combined Flow Rate

  20. Any questions?

More Related