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4218600 
Journal Article 
A New Process for Maleic Anhydride Synthesis from a Renewable Building Block: The Gas-Phase Oxidehydration of Bio-1-butanol 
Pavarelli, G; Velasquez Ochoa, J; Caldarelli, A; Puzzo, F; Cavani, F; Dubois, JL 
2015 
Yes 
ChemSusChem
ISSN: 1864-5631
EISSN: 1864-564X 
13 
2250-2259 
English 
We investigated the synthesis of maleic anhydride by oxidehydration of a bio-alcohol, 1-butanol, as a possible alternative to the classical process of n-butane oxidation. A vanadyl pyrophosphate catalyst was used to explore the one-pot reaction, which involved two sequential steps: 1) 1-butanol dehydration to 1-butene, catalysed by acid sites, and 2) the oxidation of butenes to maleic anhydride, catalysed by redox sites. A non-negligible amount of phthalic anhydride was also formed. The effect of different experimental parameters was investigated with chemically sourced 1-butanol, and the results were then confirmed by using genuinely bio-sourced 1-butanol. In the case of bio-1-butanol, however, the purity of the product remarkably affected the yield of maleic anhydride. It was found that the reaction mechanism includes the oxidation of butenes to crotonaldehyde and the oxidation of the latter to either furan or maleic acid, both of which are transformed to produce maleic anhydride. 
Chemistry; alcohols, anhydrides, oxidation, renewable resources, vanadium; n-butane oxidation, vanadyl pyrophosphate catalysts, solid-base; catalysts, surface-properties, selective oxidation, oxygenated; hydrocarbons, phthalic anhydrides, aldol condensation, phosphorus; oxides, c-4 hydrocarbons 
IRIS
• Vanadium Compounds - Problem Formulation
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• Vanadium Inhalation
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