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Catalyst Selectivity Synthesis gas applications

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Presentation on theme: "Catalyst Selectivity Synthesis gas applications"— Presentation transcript:

1 Catalyst Selectivity Synthesis gas applications
CH4 CH3OH CnH2n+2 CnH2n CnH2n+1OH (n = 1 - 6) H2 / CO Ni Cu Cu + Co Fe, Co Catalysis and Catalysts - Activity, Selectivity and Stability

2 Examples of Catalyst Deactivation
Time (h) 1.0 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 r (rel) Time (h) Methanol Yield (gcm-3h-1) p GHSV T = 70 bar = h-1 = 515 K b CO H CH3OH c FCC Methanol Synthesis HDS a S-344 (660 K) 5 k1.85 (gcm-3h-1%S-0.85) S-324 (655 K) Catalysis and Catalysts - Activity, Selectivity and Stability Time (h)

3 Catalytic Reforming (Gasoline Production)
30 20 10 Conversion (% olefins/initial paraffins) Time (h) + 0.17% W + 0.17% Re + 0.04% Ru + 0.04% Ir Pt only pH pHC LHSV T = 1.35 bar = 0.10 bar = 1 h-1 = 745 K 2 C12H26 C12H H2 Catalyst Pt (0.2%) / Al2O3 d Deactivation due to coke deposition Alloying quite successful Catalysis and Catalysts - Activity, Selectivity and Stability

4 Time-Scale of Deactivation
10 -1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Hydrocracking HDS Catalytic reforming EO Hydrogenations Aldehydes Acetylene Oxychlorination MA Formaldehyde NH oxidation SCR Fat hardening Time / seconds TWC 1 year 1 day 1 hour C dehydrogenation FCC Most bulk processes year Batch processes hrs-days Catalysis and Catalysts - Activity, Selectivity and Stability

5 Deactivation of catalysts irreversible loss of activity
Types of deactivation: Poisoning: strong chemisorption of impurity in feed (Inhibition: competitive adsorption, reversible) Fouling: secondary reactions of reactants or products, ‘coke’ formation Thermal degradation: sintering (loss of surface area), evaporation Mechanical damage Corrosion/leaching Fouling or ‘self-poisoning’ often cause of deactivation Catalysis and Catalysts - Activity, Selectivity and Stability

6 Types of Deactivation Catalysis and Catalysts - Activity, Selectivity and Stability

7 What are poisons? Examples High M.W. product producer Strong
chemisorber Surface active metal or ion Sintering accelerator Bases H2S on Ni NH3 on Si-Al ‘Toxic compounds’ (free electron pair) Cu on Ni Ni on Pt Pb or Ca on Co3O4 Pb on Fe3O4 Fe on Cu Fe on Si-Al from pipes acetylenes dienes H2O (Al2O3) Cl2 (Cu) from feed or product Catalysis and Catalysts - Activity, Selectivity and Stability

8 Typical Stability Profiles in Hydrotreating
Initially high rate of deactivation mainly due to coke deposition Subsequently coke in equilibrium metal deposition continues Time-on-Stream Amount of poisoning activity coke metals Catalytic activity I III II Catalysis and Catalysts - Activity, Selectivity and Stability

9 Influence of Pore Size on Vanadium Deposition Hydrotreating of Heavy Feedstock
Catalysis and Catalysts - Activity, Selectivity and Stability

10 Carbon Formation on Supported Metal Catalyst
Catalysis and Catalysts - Activity, Selectivity and Stability

11 Carbon Filaments due to CH4 Decompostion 873 K, Ni/CaO catalyst
Catalysis and Catalysts - Activity, Selectivity and Stability

12 Sintering of Alumina upon Heating
Tcalc (K) SBET (m2/g) Sintering Reduction of surface area Catalysis and Catalysts - Activity, Selectivity and Stability

13 Sintering of Supported Catalysts
monomer dispersion 2-D cluster 3-D particle particles migrate coalesce vapour surface interparticle transport metastable migrating stable Dependent on: carrier properties temperature composition of bulk fluid …. Predictable? Catalysis and Catalysts - Activity, Selectivity and Stability

14 THüttig and TTamman Sintering is related to melting
THüttig : defects become mobile Ttamman: bulk atoms become mobile Tmelting THüttig Ttamman Al2O Cu CuO CuCl Catalysis and Catalysts - Activity, Selectivity and Stability

15 Deactivation due to Mechanical Damage
during transport, storage, packing, use loading in barrels, unloading, packing of reactor in reactor: weight of column of particles attrition in moving systems (fluid beds, moving beds) during start-up, shut-down temperature variations (thermal shocks) chemical transformations sulphiding, reduction regeneration: high T, steam Catalysis and Catalysts - Activity, Selectivity and Stability

16 Corrosion / Leaching - Examples
Alumina dissolves at pH > 12 and pH < 3, so close to these pH-values corrosion and leaching use carbon instead at very low or very high pH Sulphiding of oxides in the presence of H2S Liquid-phase catalysis in heterogenisation of homogeneous catalysts activity was due to the leached compounds rather than the solid phase in solid-catalysed fat hydrogenation traces of the Ni catalyst appear in the product; with Palladium this is not the case Catalysis and Catalysts - Activity, Selectivity and Stability

17 Influence of Deactivation on Reaction Rate
conversion or kobs process time initial level ‘constant’ ‘variable variable loss of surface area loss of active sites blocking of pores Fouling Sintering Catalysis and Catalysts - Activity, Selectivity and Stability Poisoning

18 Deactivation - depends on?
Catalysis and Catalysts - Activity, Selectivity and Stability

19 Stability too low; What to do?
Understand the cause of deactivation Take logical measures at catalyst level sound reactor and process design good engineering practice Catalysis and Catalysts - Activity, Selectivity and Stability

20 Catalyst Level improvement of active phase or support
e.g. use titania instead of alumina in SCR optimisation of texture use wide-pore catalyst in HDM to prevent pore blocking profiling of active phase e.g. egg-yolk profile will protect active sites against poisoning and fouling if these are diffusion-limited and the reaction is not reduce sintering by structural promoters or stabilisers make catalyst more attrition resistant encapsulation of active material in porous silica shell increases attrition resistance without influencing activity Catalysis and Catalysts - Activity, Selectivity and Stability

21 Tailored Reactor and Process Design
Relation between time-scale of deactivation and reactor type Time scale Typical reactor/process type years fixed-bed reactor; no regeneration months fixed-bed reactor; regeneration while reactor is off-line weeks fixed-bed reactors in swing mode, moving-bed reactor minutes - days fluidised-bed reactor, slurry reactor; continuous regeneration seconds entrained-flow reactor with continuous regeneration Catalysis and Catalysts - Activity, Selectivity and Stability

22 Different Engineering Solutions allowing for Regeneration
Propane dehydrogenation - deactivation by coke formation Catalysis and Catalysts - Activity, Selectivity and Stability

23 Good Engineering Practice
Feed purification for removal of poisons upstream reactor poison trap inside reactor on top of catalyst (if flow is downward) overdesign of reactor if catalyst itself is poison trap Optimisation of reaction conditions use of excess steam in steam reforming decreases coke deposition catalyst deactivation in selective hydrogenation of CCl2F2 strongly increases above 500 K  operate below 510 K Optimisation of conditions as function of time-on-stream compensate for activity loss by increasing T with time Catalysis and Catalysts - Activity, Selectivity and Stability

24 Examples Catalysis and Catalysts - Activity, Selectivity and Stability


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