Abstract

Phenol production through the direct hydroxylation of benzene with hydrogen peroxide, as oxidant, using a vanadium catalyst in a membrane reactor has been studied. The reaction was carried out in mild condition in a liquid–liquid biphasic system separated by a polypropylene membrane. This system showed high selectivity to phenol, minimizing its over-oxidation to over-oxygenated by-products. The influence of various reaction parameters such as the addition of hydrogen peroxide mode, catalyst and sulphuric acid amounts, temperature and reducing agent effects were investigated. The vanadium catalyst avoided tar formation in all the investigated experimental conditions compared to the previous system where an iron-based catalyst was used. Use of (C5H8O2)2VO as catalyst, 18mmol of hydrogen peroxide as oxidant pumped for 4h in the aqueous phase with the step-by-step feeding mode gave the best system performance in terms of yield (63.2%), selectivity to phenol (97.0%), and extraction quotient (76.4%).

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