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Greener synthesis of styrene carbonate from CO2 using graphene-inorganic nanocomposite catalysts

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Greener synthesis of styrene carbonate from CO2 using graphene-inorganic nanocomposite catalysts. / Onyenkeadi, V; SUELA, KELLICI; Saha, B.
10th World Congress of Chemical Engineering (WCCE10), Barcelona, Spain. 2017.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Harvard

Onyenkeadi, V, SUELA, KELLICI & Saha, B 2017, Greener synthesis of styrene carbonate from CO2 using graphene-inorganic nanocomposite catalysts. in 10th World Congress of Chemical Engineering (WCCE10), Barcelona, Spain.

APA

Onyenkeadi, V., SUELA, KELLICI., & Saha, B. (2017). Greener synthesis of styrene carbonate from CO2 using graphene-inorganic nanocomposite catalysts. In 10th World Congress of Chemical Engineering (WCCE10), Barcelona, Spain

Vancouver

Onyenkeadi V, SUELA KELLICI, Saha B. Greener synthesis of styrene carbonate from CO2 using graphene-inorganic nanocomposite catalysts. In 10th World Congress of Chemical Engineering (WCCE10), Barcelona, Spain. 2017

Author

Onyenkeadi, V ; SUELA, KELLICI ; Saha, B. / Greener synthesis of styrene carbonate from CO2 using graphene-inorganic nanocomposite catalysts. 10th World Congress of Chemical Engineering (WCCE10), Barcelona, Spain. 2017.

Bibtex

@inproceedings{8e55d368e58c4f59ba61630ff06e0c8e,
title = "Greener synthesis of styrene carbonate from CO2 using graphene-inorganic nanocomposite catalysts",
abstract = "The global emission of carbon dioxide (CO2) into the atmosphere has reached an unsustainable level that has resulted in climate change and therefore there is the need to reduce the emission of carbon dioxide. However, the reduction of CO2 emission has become a global environmental challenge and the use of CO2 to produce value added chemicals could be one of the few ways of reducing CO2 emission. CO2 is recognised as an abundant, cheap, recyclable and non-toxic carbon source and thus its utilisation for the production of value-added chemicals is extremely beneficial for the chemical industry. Styrene carbonate is a valuable chemical of great commercial interest. It is an excellent precursor material for the production of polycarbonates and can be used as a solvent for lithium battery because of its high polarity property. Several reaction routes have been attempted for styrene carbonate production, which was phosgene, oxidative carboxylation, direct synthesis using homogeneous catalyst and direct synthesis using a heterogeneous catalyst. The latter being the most attractive route due to the inexpensive raw material, ease of catalyst recovery and the avoidance of corrosive reagents, such as phosgene and dimethyl formamide. Continuous hydrothermal flow synthesis (CHFS) has been employed as a rapid and cleaner route for the synthesis of highly efficient graphene-inorganic heterogeneous catalyst, represented as Ce–La–Zr–GO nanocomposite. The graphene-inorganic heterogeneous catalyst has been characterised using transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), while X-ray powder diffraction (XRD) and Brunauer–Emmett–Teller (BET) methods have been used for the surface area measurements. Ceria, lanthana, zirconia doped graphene nanocomposite catalyst studies have shown high catalytic activity as compared to other reported heterogeneous catalysts in the absence of organic solvent with a higher selectivity of 68% and 60% yield of styrene carbonate at the reaction conditions of 408 K, 75 bar in 20 h.",
author = "V Onyenkeadi and KELLICI SUELA and B Saha",
year = "2017",
month = oct,
day = "1",
language = "English",
booktitle = "10th World Congress of Chemical Engineering (WCCE10), Barcelona, Spain",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Greener synthesis of styrene carbonate from CO2 using graphene-inorganic nanocomposite catalysts

AU - Onyenkeadi, V

AU - SUELA, KELLICI

AU - Saha, B

PY - 2017/10/1

Y1 - 2017/10/1

N2 - The global emission of carbon dioxide (CO2) into the atmosphere has reached an unsustainable level that has resulted in climate change and therefore there is the need to reduce the emission of carbon dioxide. However, the reduction of CO2 emission has become a global environmental challenge and the use of CO2 to produce value added chemicals could be one of the few ways of reducing CO2 emission. CO2 is recognised as an abundant, cheap, recyclable and non-toxic carbon source and thus its utilisation for the production of value-added chemicals is extremely beneficial for the chemical industry. Styrene carbonate is a valuable chemical of great commercial interest. It is an excellent precursor material for the production of polycarbonates and can be used as a solvent for lithium battery because of its high polarity property. Several reaction routes have been attempted for styrene carbonate production, which was phosgene, oxidative carboxylation, direct synthesis using homogeneous catalyst and direct synthesis using a heterogeneous catalyst. The latter being the most attractive route due to the inexpensive raw material, ease of catalyst recovery and the avoidance of corrosive reagents, such as phosgene and dimethyl formamide. Continuous hydrothermal flow synthesis (CHFS) has been employed as a rapid and cleaner route for the synthesis of highly efficient graphene-inorganic heterogeneous catalyst, represented as Ce–La–Zr–GO nanocomposite. The graphene-inorganic heterogeneous catalyst has been characterised using transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), while X-ray powder diffraction (XRD) and Brunauer–Emmett–Teller (BET) methods have been used for the surface area measurements. Ceria, lanthana, zirconia doped graphene nanocomposite catalyst studies have shown high catalytic activity as compared to other reported heterogeneous catalysts in the absence of organic solvent with a higher selectivity of 68% and 60% yield of styrene carbonate at the reaction conditions of 408 K, 75 bar in 20 h.

AB - The global emission of carbon dioxide (CO2) into the atmosphere has reached an unsustainable level that has resulted in climate change and therefore there is the need to reduce the emission of carbon dioxide. However, the reduction of CO2 emission has become a global environmental challenge and the use of CO2 to produce value added chemicals could be one of the few ways of reducing CO2 emission. CO2 is recognised as an abundant, cheap, recyclable and non-toxic carbon source and thus its utilisation for the production of value-added chemicals is extremely beneficial for the chemical industry. Styrene carbonate is a valuable chemical of great commercial interest. It is an excellent precursor material for the production of polycarbonates and can be used as a solvent for lithium battery because of its high polarity property. Several reaction routes have been attempted for styrene carbonate production, which was phosgene, oxidative carboxylation, direct synthesis using homogeneous catalyst and direct synthesis using a heterogeneous catalyst. The latter being the most attractive route due to the inexpensive raw material, ease of catalyst recovery and the avoidance of corrosive reagents, such as phosgene and dimethyl formamide. Continuous hydrothermal flow synthesis (CHFS) has been employed as a rapid and cleaner route for the synthesis of highly efficient graphene-inorganic heterogeneous catalyst, represented as Ce–La–Zr–GO nanocomposite. The graphene-inorganic heterogeneous catalyst has been characterised using transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), while X-ray powder diffraction (XRD) and Brunauer–Emmett–Teller (BET) methods have been used for the surface area measurements. Ceria, lanthana, zirconia doped graphene nanocomposite catalyst studies have shown high catalytic activity as compared to other reported heterogeneous catalysts in the absence of organic solvent with a higher selectivity of 68% and 60% yield of styrene carbonate at the reaction conditions of 408 K, 75 bar in 20 h.

M3 - Conference contribution/Paper

BT - 10th World Congress of Chemical Engineering (WCCE10), Barcelona, Spain

ER -