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Trends in Solvent Management in the Pharmaceutical Industry. C. Stewart Slater and Mariano J. Savelski Department of Chemical Engineering Rowan University Glassboro, NJ. Session 656: Green Engineering in the Fine Chemical and Pharmaceutical Industry AIChE Annual Meeting
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Trends in Solvent Management in the Pharmaceutical Industry C. Stewart Slater and Mariano J. Savelski Department of Chemical Engineering Rowan University Glassboro, NJ Session 656: Green Engineering in the Fine Chemical and Pharmaceutical Industry AIChE Annual Meeting Nashville, TN November 8-13, 2009
Solvent Issues • Solvent use can account for up to 80-90% of total mass of an API synthesis • Majority are organic solvents • Solvent costs over life cycle • Pay to purchase • Pay to use (energy and associated costs) • Pay to dispose of • E-Factor 25->100 kg/kg of API* • Not optimal for a ChE!!! • Practice green chemistry & engineering Sheldon, Chem Ind, 1 (1997) 12
Pharma Industry Profile • US EPA Toxic Release Inventory (TRI) 2006 • 128 MM kg waste • Top ten solvents account for 80% of waste Lopez, Toxic Release Inventory, US EPA, 2006
Solvent Waste Management Trends • ~70% of waste is treated or recycled* • ~30% of waste is used for energy recovery* • Only a small percent is directly released into the environment • Incineration remains the disposal method of choice • CO2 emissions • Heat recovery • Increasing trend towards solvent recovery Lopez, Toxic Release Inventory, US EPA, 2006
Optimization of Solvent Use and Waste Reduction • Greener solvent selection / solvent substitution • Elimination of highly hazardous solvents • Solvent reduction • Recovery techniques • Novel approaches to separations • Telescoping • Novel reaction media (ionic liquids) • Biocatalytic routes • Solid-state chemistry
“Plant of the Future” • The plant of the future will likely use a limited number of ‘universal’ green solvents • Properties allow for easy recovery • Used with other campaigns • Integrated solvent recovery systems • Continuous processing simplifies recovery design strategies • Energy exchange networks Slater and Savelski, Innov Pharma Tech, 29 (2009) 78
Solvent Recovery • Solvent recovery has increased, On-site and Off-site recovery facilities • Distillation still dominates - straightforward separation for ideal mixtures • Pharmaceutical wastes typically contain • Multiple solvents • Azeotropic mixtures • Unconverted reactants, etc • Complex separation trains to obtain high quality solvent for reuse • Centralized solvent recovery facility > New approach - integrate separation processes at the point of use
Solvent Recovery • Azeotropic separations pose the most challenge in processing • Entrainer-based distillation • More energy intensive • Entrainers pose additional source of pollution • Membrane pervaporation is a “greener” alternative for azeotropic separations
Pervaporation Membrane Processes • Applications: • Selective solvent-water separations / Dehydration • Azeotrope separations • Advantages: • Energy savings over distillation • No entrainer (e.g., benzene) needed for azeotropic separations • Solvent reuse; solvent savings • Avoid solvent disposal / solvent thermal oxidation Water = blue Solvent = green www.sulzerchemtech.com
PV Process Integration Typical Solvents • Isopropanol (az) • Ethanol (az) • Methanol • Ethyl acetate • Butyl acetate • Acetone • Acetronitrile (az) • Tetrahydrofuran (az) • n-Butanol • Methylethylketone (az) Dehydrated solvent for reuse Solvent-water azeotropic mixture Pervaporation Solvent-water waste stream Low flow rate stream: water with some solvent
Green Integration Illustrative ExampleProcess optimizationEmissions reductionCost savingsEnergy savings No Recovery THF Water Extractive Distillation 1,2-Propanediol THF Water WASTE RECOVERY Pervaporation THF Water THF Trace water RECOVERY THF Trace Water WASTE THF Water RECOVERY Water THF
Process Case Study - Pfizer Recovery • Investigation of solvent recovery alternatives to reduce solvent waste in celecoxib process • IPA solvent recovery from final purification steps • Integration of pervaporation with distillation using existing equipment inventory IPA / Water Washes 50% IPA 50% Water IPA / Water Washes 49.2% IPA 49.6% H2O 0.71% MeOH and EtOH 0.5% TDS Centrifuge Solvents Water API Other Mother Liquor 34.5% IPA 45.2% H2O 8.45% MeOH 2.71% EtOH 9.10% TDS Conc. & Sell ML Wet Product Solids Dryer Celecoxib Dryer Distillates 50.7% IPA 48.8% H2O 0.47% MeOH and EtOH 0% TDS Slater, Savelski, Hounsell, Pilipauskas, Urbanski, ACS Green Chem & Eng Annual Conf, Washington DC, June 2008,
Proposed Distillation-PV-Distillation Process A design basis of 1000 kg waste/hr is used for illustrative purposes • Purification for only part of waste stream • Centrifuge wash and Dyer distillates for recovery • Mother liquor for (sale) use as generic solvent • Overall 57% IPA recovered @ 99.1 wt% for reuse in process • Other options of Distill-PV or PV only, yield different recoveries and purities Slater, Savelski, Hounsell, Pilipauskas, Urbanski, ACS Green Chem & Eng Annual Conf, Washington DC, June 2008,
Life Cycle Emissions Comparison Total Base Case Emissions: 29.5 kg waste/kg API Total Dist-PV-Dist Emissions: 2.4 kg waste/kg API ~92% decrease in total emissions Savelski, Slater, Carole, 8th Inter. Conf. EcoBalance, Tokyo, Japan, December 2008.
Economic Analysis 72% Annual Cost Savings Slater, Savelski, Hounsell, Pilipauskas, Urbanski, ACS Green Chem & Eng Annual Conf, Washington DC, June 2008,
Summary • Solvent use and waste practices should be constantly reviewed • Development of sustainable practices Green advantage • Waste minimization • Cost effective
Acknowledgements • Pfizer • U.S. Environmental Protection Agency P2 grant #NP97257006-0