Final Report Summary - SYNFLOW (Innovative Synthesis in Continuous-Flow Processes for Sustainable Chemical Production)
SYNFLOW has developed and successfully demonstrated the concept of catalytic process design to provide continuous flow-processes with superior process performance and clearly identifiable business advantages for small to medium scale chemical and pharamceutical manufacturing. Based on experimental results and conceptual insight gained in all parts of the project, significant steps towards a holistic process design methodology have been established. For economic and ecological evaluation of different production pathways, surveys for detailed data collection and a staged evaluation process were introduced. An efficient mechanism for sharing the created knowledge within the project was created and exchange of know-how between the partners was fostered by collaborations and training programs. The SYNFLOW project delivered a remarkable scientific output measured in published papers and contributions to international conferences, and has already established an integrated platform for interdisciplinary collaboration between academia and industry to ensure rapid technology transfer.
Project Context and Objectives:
SYNFLOW concept and objectives
SYNFLOW aims at developing the basis for new and widely applicable sustainable production technologies in low to medium scale chemical and pharmaceutical production. The vision of SYNFLOW is to shift paradigm from batch-wise processes comprising many separate unit operations to highly integrated, and yet flexible catalytic continuous-flow processing.
SYNFLOW Industrial case studies
The industrial sectors addressed in the SYNFLOW project, namely fine and specialty chemicals industry and pharmaceutical industry are characterised by a large diversity in synthetic problems and targeted chemical structures. In order to demonstrate the generality and broad impact of the SYNFLOW concept, the case studies were chosen as prototypical examples for generic challenges in these fields. The current commercial processes represent reaction types such as C-N bond formation, C-C coupling, or stoichiometric reductions, which are notorious for the waste generation and inefficient resource and energy utilisation in the fine chemicals and pharmaceutical sector. These case examples provide the raw models to develop and establish the design process of the SYNFLOW concept, which can then be directly transferred to other transformations or classes of transformations.
6 industrial case studies defined by the industrial partners Bayer Technology Services, AstraZeneca and Evonik have been investigated in the SYNFLOW project:
Pharmaceutical Sector
• Buchwald-Hartwig Reaction; development of a flexible flow methodology for the formation of C-N bonds in a range of target molecules
• Amide Reduction; use of molecular hydrogen as "cleanest" reducing agent, generating only water as a by-product
• Suzuki Couplings; Pd-catalysed cross coupling processes are widely used in the pharmaceutical industry for C-C bond formation
• Asymmetric hydrogenation; Catalytic asymmetric reduction has become an extremely important transformation in the toolkit of process chemists in the pharmaceutical industry
Chemical Sector
• Nitrile synthesis - development of flow processes for the synthesis of aromatic and longer chain aliphatic nitriles, commonly used in the manufacture of agrochemicals, dyes and pharmaceuticals
• Atom-efficient olefin coupling; C-C coupling of C2 and C4 olefins via dimerisation and telomerisation
In an ideal continuous flow processes, the substrates flow into the reactor, get in contact with the catalyst immobilized in the reactor, undergo a chemical transformation under well defined process conditions and residence time and finally leave the reactor in a pure form, ready for further use without further separation or purification steps.
This ambitious goal can be achieved by an integrated development of molecular catalysts, immobilization strategies and reaction engineering concepts for continuous-flow reactions. An interdisciplinary team of 13 academic and 6 industrial partners from all over Europe has collaborated in the SYNFLOW project.
In order to overcome the limitations of the traditional linear work flow for the development of medium to small scale processes, SYNFLOW aimed at a conceptually new approach based on an integrative design of molecular catalysts, their synthetic application, and the reaction engineering concepts. This new paradigm has been developed and demonstrated on the basis of selected industrial case studies to provide a well-defined basis for its generic application.
Project Results:
Main demonstrator case studies
The Buchwald-Hartwig case study provided by AstraZeneca was successfully demonstrated thereby meeting all of the required success criteria. The demonstrator work has clearly proven the feasibility of the continuous process for the case study reaction on kg scale. The process achieves excellent values with respect to process performance indicators and the metal content in the final product. Telescoping the demonstrated reaction step with previous or subsequent steps in the synthesis of the final desired molecule would obviously increase the benefit of such a process even more. Approximately 20 % of small molecule pharmaceuticals contain a structural motif that could be made using this methodology, therefore the potential for beyond the specifically investigated case study is significant.
The asymmetric hydrogenation case study of a pharmaceutical substrate provided by Astra Zeneca has been demonstrated on kg scale using two different reaction systems. Extremely stable performances with high conversion and constant high enantioselectivity were achieved fully matching the envisaged success criteria. Very important success is the low metal contamination in the isolated product which is an important driver for continuous-flow process in API manufacturing.
Two other case studies, the direct hydrogenation of an amide (amide reduction to an amines and a homogeneously catalysed dimerisation (telomerisation) of butadiene have been demonstrated with great success. The other case studies have been investigated at lab scale.
More rational approach to catalytic process design
SYNFLOW partners have developed a range of methodologies during the project to aid catalytic process design, optimisation and implementation. Part of the methodologies is qualitative in nature with the intention to allow rapid identification of lead process options, and dismissal of unfeasible options. The output from the methodology will also identify key data requirements for process optimisation. Another methodology aspect is a rational approach to select the appropriate equipment matching the process requirements.
More quantitative methodologies include a quantitative model-based approach to the design of integrated reaction and separation processes and a reactor design by CFD used to reactor scale-up.
Potential Impact:
SYNFLOW impact
The SYNFLOW project provided important knowledge regarding a more rationale approach to catalytic process design, thereby showing evidence for superior process performance and distinct potential business advantages of continuous flow processes impacting small to medium scale chemical and pharmaceutical manufacturing.
SYNFLOW dissemination output
Within SYNFLOW a number of materials have been developed available to an interested community outside the consortium:
• a SYNFLOW training package on the developed methodology, aimed at young chemists and engineers engaged in PhD or postdoctoral research through to more experienced industrial chemists/engineers.
• SYNFLOW case study posters to raise awareness of the concepts developed in the project.
• a SYNFLOW promotional video
All materials will be available on the SYNFLOW website www.synflow.eu but will also be hosted on the website of the European Technology Platform SusChem www.suschem.org. For this purpose, a dedicated education and project material portal is under construction.
List of Websites:
www.synflow.eu