Chen, Tai-Ying2021-11-112021-11-112021https://udspace.udel.edu/handle/19716/293635-hydroxymethyl furfural (HMF) is an important platform chemical because it can be upgraded to various drop-in and performance-advantaged products. The cascade reaction of HMF production from glucose over a Lewis acid (CrCl3) and a Brønsted acid (HCl) catalyst in aqueous media is investigated in a microreactor at short residence times and high temperatures. The catalyst reactivity increases sharply at short residence times and then drops at long times. This indicates that the catalyst treatment plays a vital role in getting optimal reactivity, and recording the catalyst history is necessary. We develop a kinetic model to describe the catalyst speciation and the Lewis and Brønsted acid-catalyzed reaction kinetics using a hierarchical approach. The model is in good agreement with experiments. We demonstrate the benefits of tandem Lewis-external added Brønsted acid catalysis in processing time, productivity, and catalyst stability. We apply this model to optimize the HMF yield and obtain ~36% yield at 200 °C in 7 min and report the highest productivity of >10% yield/min, demonstrating the opportunity of reaching high productivity at short residence times.Microflow kineticsGlucose conversionHydroxymethyl furfuralFast microflow kinetics studies of glucose conversion to hydroxymethyl furfuralThesis12850673442021-08-11en