2022

Progress in flow chemistry

by cyb2025

ROBERT ASHE
Consultant, Buckinghamshire, Unite Kingdom

ABSTRACT

The inventory in a flow reactor at any point is a small fraction of the total material being processed. This is an inherently better solution than batch methods in virtually all respects. Capability, however, is dictated by the flow reactor type and size. Current devices generally fall into three areas of use: micro reactors for research, specialised reactors for difficult or dangerous chemistry and large dedicated flow reactors for bulk chemicals. Despite progress, over 90% of industrial chemicals by type are still made in batch reactors. Large parts of the process industries rely on high volume reactors capable of handling different operations. The underlying principles for equivalent capability in flow are well established but as yet, underexploited.

Batch reactors (Figure 1) are stirred vessels used in the process industries for mixing, synthesis, and separation. Most have external jackets for heating and cooling. At the industrial scale, they typically have volumetric capacities of between one and ten cubic metres. Their value lies in the ability to process thousands of litres in a day for a broad range of applications. Despite these benefits, large vessels have significant limitations. To compensate for the low heat transfer area per unit volume, measures such as increased dilution, reduced operating temperatures, and semi batch addition are common practice. These prolong the process cycle and increase contact between reactants and product. Slow cooling leaves materials exposed to elevated temperatures for long periods after the reaction is complete. Mixing times (1) are poor and shear is localised. These factors variously impact yield and quality. A typical batch cycle involves inertion, filling, heating, addition, cooling, discharge, and cleaning. These activities reduce productive capacity to a value in the region of 100 litres per hour per cubic metre of reactor volume. The number falls with increasing reactor size.

 

Flow reactors (Figure 2) operate continuously, processing a small fraction of the total lot quantity at any time. Residence time in flow is dictated by reaction time. If this is 6 minutes, material remains in a flow reactor for 6 minutes. Shorter residence times, better mixing, and reduced contact between reacted and unreacted material contribute to improved quality and yield (2, 3). For a 6 minute residence time, the productive capacity in flow is 10,000 litres per hour per cubic metre of reactor capacity. This falls to 1,000 for a one hour reaction and approaches parity with large batch at reaction times above 10 hours. Higher productivity contributes to substantial reductions in plant size, operating costs, and energy use.

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Robert Ashe is a chemical engineer with over 45 years’ experience in the process industries. He co-founded AM Technology in 2000, a company specialising in flow chemistry. He has spoken at numerous flow chemistry events and has been the author or co-author of multiple publications. He retired from the company in 2020 but remains actively involved in flow chemistry, focussing on the chemical engineering aspects of plant scale solutions.

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