Methane to methanol / a direct pathway ?

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    Methane Methanol
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Direct conversion of methane to methanol is a challenging area of research, with two main approaches identified: chemical methods using traditional catalysts and biological methods utilizing enzymes or bacteria. Despite nearly a century of investigation, no economically viable process has been developed, primarily due to low yields, often below 10%. The discussion highlights the difficulty of altering methane's stable structure, likening the endeavor to a "holy grail reaction." Recent searches for ongoing studies yielded limited results, with only one patent noted, which also suffers from low yield. The biological approach is viewed as potentially more feasible, especially under less extreme conditions. The conversation invites contributions from anyone with relevant expertise or connections in this field.
Borealis
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Dear all !

Does anyone have experience with direct methane conversion to methanol ?
I am trying to explore a new pathway avoiding the syn gas step.
One can basically think of two approaches:
a) chemically via classic catalysts, b) biologically via enzymes or bacteria.
Research has been done for almost 100 years on that topic, so far no ona has implemented an economically feasible process for making methanol directly from methane.
The main problem is the low yield (below 10 %).

Who knows something about this topic and who knows someone who could
contribute ?
 
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Borealis said:
Dear all !

Does anyone have experience with direct methane conversion to methanol ?
I am trying to explore a new pathway avoiding the syn gas step.
One can basically think of two approaches:
a) chemically via classic catalysts, b) biologically via enzymes or bacteria.
Research has been done for almost 100 years on that topic, so far no ona has implemented an economically feasible process for making methanol directly from methane.
The main problem is the low yield (below 10 %).

Who knows something about this topic and who knows someone who could
contribute ?
Sounds like a holy grail reaction. Methane is very very happy as it is and you would have to do an awful lot to change it. I ran a search on sci-finder and didn't come up with anyone doing this type of study lately. There is one patent i could find but it looks to have low yield (such as you suggested). maybe soon if there becomes a big enough demand for this type of reaction.

biologically doing this sounds more logical imo because something under extremely basic conditions would be hard. Ill ask around for you around the lab and see if anyone knows anything
 
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