Flow Electrosynthesis and Development of Electrochemical Flow Cells for Scale up of Laboratory Synthesis
Richard C D Brown, Professor, University of Southampton
Electrosynthesis
is a potentially powerful tool for chemists, enabling many types of reaction, and
in some cases without reagents or catalysts. Despite the clear attractions of electrosynthesis,
it remains somewhat underutilised in academic and industrial labs. Although
flow electrosynthesis has been practiced for many years for selected
applications, recently, microfluidic electrochemical flow reactors have emerged
as a convenient platform for laboratory electrosynthesis. Despite
a number of interesting electrosyntheses in microfluidic devices, much of the
literature reports productivity rates of mg h–1, which limits the
use of the technology. We recently demonstrated that with careful design of the
flow path, flow rates could be significantly increased, leading to
productivities of multiple grams per hour without affecting conversion and
yield in devices with relatively small footprint.1,2 High
productivity rates have been demonstrated in multiple reactions such as anodic
methoxylation of N-formylpyrrolidine,2
and N-heterocyclic carbene (NHC)
mediated oxidative esterification and amidation of aldehydes.3,4 To
extend the productivity rate available in laboratory flow electrosynthesis
reactors we developed a flow cell possessing an enlarged electrode area while
retaining a micron-scale interelectrode gap. Using the anodic methoxylation as
a test reaction, the “Ammonite” scale up flow cell was shown to be capable of producing
methoxylated product at rates exceeding 20 g h–1 with high
conversion and selectivity.5 The reactor has a small footprint,
easily fitting within a standard fumehood, allowing scale up of flow
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