Safety Assessments Supporting Scale-up of Chemistry Involving Hydrogen

Cuixian Yang,Tao Wang,Daniel J. Muzzio, Stephen Van Cleaf,Eric M. Phillips,Adam J. Fine, Thomas P. Vickery, Alexei Kalinin,Stephen M. Dalby,Theodore R. Furman, Ryan Flessner, Analisse Rosario,Ralph Zhao,Megan Roth

Organic Process Research & Development(2021)

引用 2|浏览0
暂无评分
摘要
Asymmetric transfer hydrogenation (ATH) is a commonly used transformation in the pharmaceutical industry for the reduction of ketones to establish key stereocenters. Yet, the potential for hydrogen gas generation during reaction, workup, and waste handling processes could be overlooked, resulting in serious safety issues such as waste container overpressurization or fire. In this study, multiple module calorimeter (MMC) testing along with micro-GC tests of small scale (1–2 mL) representative lab samples were performed to detect and predict the potential safety hazards associated with the scale-up of an ATH process. Due to the safety concern discovered in the early safety screening tests, methanesulfonic acid (MSA) quench was implemented at the end of the ATH reaction to suppress hydrogen generation, avoiding possible overpressurizing the waste drum and the need to use special hydrogen-rated equipment at pilot- and production-scale. A safety assessment was performed to ensure that the subsequent vacuum distillation poses no risk of hydrogen combustion caused by using a standard pump/system. The process improvements and rigorous safety assessments enable the ATH reaction to be scaled-up using standard pilot plant equipment without the need for special handling and monitoring requirements for hydrogen gas. This study provides useful guidance and recommendations for safer scaling-up of similar organic synthetic reactions which may also generate flammable gas.
更多
查看译文
关键词
asymmetric transfer hydrogenation (ATH),fire,waste drum,hydrogen gas,process safety,multiple module calorimeter (MMC)
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要