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1.
The oxidation of supported cobalt based slurry bed Fischer–Tropsch catalysts by means of water was studied. Water is one of the Fischer–Tropsch reaction products and can probably cause oxidation and deactivation of a reduced cobalt catalyst. Model experiments using Mössbauer emission spectroscopy and thermogravimetry as well as realistic Fischer–Tropsch synthesis runs were performed. It was demonstrated that Mössbauer emission spectroscopy can successfully be applied to the investigation of high cobalt loading Fischer–Tropsch catalysts. Strong indications were found that oxidation of reduced cobalt catalysts occurs under realistic Fischer–Tropsch conditions. Mössbauer emission spectroscopy and thermogravimetry results showed that the oxidation depends on the PH2/PH2O ratio, and that oxidation proceeds to less than complete extents under certain conditions. The formation of both reducible and less reducible cobalt oxide species was observed, and the relative ratio between these species depends on the severity of the oxidation conditions.  相似文献   

2.
The effect of cobalt precursor, catalyst pretreatment and promotion with ruthenium and rhenium on the formation of cobalt metal nanoparticles and catalytic performance of supported Fischer–Tropsch (FT) catalysts was studied using a combination of techniques (DSC–TGA, UV–vis spectroscopy, XPS, XRD, EXAFS–XANES, in situ magnetization measurements, propene chemisorption and catalytic measurements). The cobalt promoted and unpromoted catalysts were prepared by aqueous co-impregnation using cobalt nitrate or acetate, ruthenium nitrosyl nitrate or perrhenic acid. In both unpromoted and Ru and Re-promoted cobalt catalysts after impregnation and drying, cobalt is present mainly in octahedrally coordinated complexes. The repartition of cobalt species between Co3O4 and cobalt silicate depends essentially on the exothermicity of precursor decomposition. Cobalt nitrate precursor, with an endothermic decomposition, favors Co3O4 crystallites. Lower temperature of cobalt nitrate decomposition and catalyst calcination generally leads to higher dispersion of supported cobalt oxide. Cobalt acetate precursor, with an exothermic decomposition, favors cobalt silicate. By optimizing the conditions of cobalt acetate decomposition, the fraction of cobalt silicate can be decreased favoring a more reducible Co3O4 phase. For the catalysts prepared from cobalt nitrate, promotion with ruthenium increases the cobalt dispersion, while maintaining high reducibility. For the catalyst prepared via low temperature decomposition of cobalt acetate, addition of ruthenium increases the fraction of Co3O4 crystalline phase and decreases the concentration of barely reducible cobalt silicate. The Fischer–Tropsch reaction rates over unpromoted and promoted cobalt catalysts were found to be primarily a function of the number of cobalt metal sites, which are generated by the reduction of Co3O4 crystallites.  相似文献   

3.
Carbon nanotubes supported iron catalysts were prepared by incipient wetness, deposition/precipitation using K2CO3, and deposition/precipitation using urea. The incipient wetness method and the deposition/precipitation technique using urea yielded highly dispersed Fe3+ on the carbon nanotubes support. The deposition/precipitation technique using K2CO3 also yielded larger Fe2O3-crystallites. After reduction the three catalysts had similar metal surface areas. Nevertheless, the activity of these catalysts in the Fischer–Tropsch synthesis differed significantly with the catalyst prepared by incipient wetness being the most active one. It is speculated that the differences in the performance of the catalysts might be attributed to the different crystallite size distributions, which would result in a variation in the amount of the different phases present in the catalyst under reaction conditions. The selectivity in the Fischer–Tropsch synthesis over the three catalysts seems to be independent of the method of preparation.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of adding zirconia to the alumina support on supported cobalt Fischer–Tropsch catalysts has been studied. At 5 bar and H2:CO ratio 9:1 zirconia addition to the support leads to a significant increase in both activity and selectivity to higher hydrocarbons as compared to the unmodified catalysts. Reducibility and cobalt dispersion on the other hand are not improved by the presence of zirconia compared to the unmodified catalysts. SSITKA measurements have been performed in order to determine the intrinsic activity per active site. At constant temperature, zirconia-modified and unmodified catalysts showed basically the same intrinsic activity. Similar results were obtained with a noble metal (Pt) promoted catalyst. The promoting effect appears to be mainly due to coverage effects rather than a change in the intrinsic activity of the active sites. The turnover frequencies were found to be independent of pressure but strongly temperature dependent. However, the increase in turnover frequency did not account for the entire increase in reaction rate with temperature. This indicates that also the coverage of reactive intermediates increases with increasing temperature.  相似文献   

5.
The pulse transient method has been used to study the kinetics of several key steps of Fischer–Tropsch (FT) synthesis over cobalt supported catalysts. These elementary steps involve chemisorption of hydrogen and propene, and chemisorption and hydrogenation of carbon monoxide. It is found that at the conditions of Fischer–Tropsch synthesis, hydrogen chemisorption is reversible and quasi-equilibrated, while carbon monoxide adsorption is generally irreversible. Chemisorption of propene on cobalt metal sites results in its rapid autohydrogenation to propane and simultaneous formation of CxHy surface species.

The transient response curves produced during hydrogenation of carbon monoxide pulses in a flow of hydrogen have been analyzed using the modified Kobayashi model, which involves irreversible chemisorption and dissociation of carbon monoxide, quasi-equilibrated adsorption of hydrogen and reversible adsorption of water. The kinetic analysis suggests that oxygen-containing species are probably the most abundant surface intermediates. Desorption of water from the catalysts seems to be much slower than hydrogenation of surface carbon species.  相似文献   


6.
The activity and selectivity of rhenium promoted cobalt Fischer–Tropsch catalysts supported on Al2O3, TiO2 and SiO2 have been studied in a fixed-bed reactor at 483 K and 20 bar. Exposure of the catalysts to water added to the feed deactivates the Al2O3 supported catalyst, while the activity of the TiO2 and SiO2 supported catalysts increased. However, at high concentrations of water both the SiO2 and TiO2 supported catalyst deactivated. Common for all catalysts was an increase in C5+ selectivity and a decrease in the CH4 selectivity by increasing the water partial pressure. The catalysts have been characterized by scanning transmission electron microscope (STEM), BET, H2 chemisorption and X-ray diffraction (XRD).  相似文献   

7.
We examined the effect of the activation process on the structural and morphological characteristics of a cobalt-based catalyst for Fischer–Tropsch synthesis. A 10 wt.% Co/SiO2 catalyst prepared by wet impregnation was separately activated under H2, CO or a H2/CO mixture. The structural changes during activation from 298 to 773 K were studied by in situ X-ray diffraction. Catalysts were examined by SEM, TEM, XPS and in situ DRIFT-MS. The H2/CO activation produced redispersion of cobalt particles and simultaneous carbon nanostructures formation. The catalyst showed the highest performance in the Fischer–Tropsch synthesis after the H2/CO activation.  相似文献   

8.
Fischer–Tropsch synthesis was carried out in slurry phase over uniformly dispersed Co–SiO2 catalysts prepared by the sol–gel method. When 0.01–1 wt.% of noble metals were added to the Co–SiO2 catalysts, a high and stable catalytic activity was obtained over 60 h of the reaction at 503 K and 1 MPa. The addition of noble metals increased the reducibility of surface Co on the catalysts, without changing the particle size of Co metal significantly. High dispersion of metallic Co species stabilized on SiO2 was responsible for stable activity. The uniform pore size of the catalysts was enlarged by varying the preparation conditions and by adding organic compounds such as N,N-dimethylformamide and formamide. Increased pore size resulted in decrease in CO conversion and selectivity for CO2, a byproduct, and an increase in the olefin/paraffin ratio of the products. By modifying the surface of wide pore silica with Co–SiO2 prepared by the sol–gel method, a bimodal pore structured catalyst was prepared. The bimodal catalyst showed high catalytic performance with reducing the amount of the expensive sol–gel Co–SiO2.  相似文献   

9.
57Co-Mössbauer emission spectroscopy (MES) has been used to study the oxidation of cobalt as a deactivation mechanism of high loading cobalt based Fischer–Tropsch catalysts for the gas-to-liquids process. It was reported previously [Catal. Today 58 (2000) 321; Proceedings of the International Symposium on the Industrial Applications of the Mössbauer Effect, 13–18 August, 2000, Virginia Beach, VA] that oxidation was observed at atmospheric pressure under conditions that were in contradiction with the bulk cobalt phase thermodynamics. A high-pressure MES cell was designed and constructed, which created the opportunity to study the oxidation of cobalt based Fischer–Tropsch catalysts under realistic synthesis conditions. The cobalt catalyst preparation procedure was investigated by means of 57Fe-Mössbauer absorption spectroscopy, applying 57Fe as a probe atom. Initial results indicate, although not yet conclusive, that a 57Co-MES catalyst can be prepared from the industrial prepared standard Co catalyst by an additional simple incipient wetness impregnation procedure.  相似文献   

10.
Monolithic structures made of cordierite, γ-Al2O3 and steel have been prepared as catalysts and tested for Fischer–Tropsch activity. The monoliths made of cordierite and steel were washcoated with a 20 wt.% Co–1 wt.% Re/γ-Al2O3 Fischer–Tropsch catalyst whereas the γ-Al2O3 monoliths were made by direct impregnation with an aqueous solution of the Co and Re salts resulting in a loading of 12 wt.% Co and 0.5 wt.% Re. The activity and selectivity of the different monoliths were compared with the corresponding powder catalysts.

Higher washcoat loadings resulted in decreased C5+ selectivity and olefin/paraffin ratios due to increased transport limitations. The impregnated γ-Al2O3 monoliths also showed similar C5+ selectivities as powder catalysts of small particle size (38–53 μm). Lower activities were observed with the steel monoliths probably due to experimental problems.  相似文献   


11.
M. Sathish  R.P. Viswanath   《Catalysis Today》2007,129(3-4):421-427
Mesoporous CdS nanoparticles with an average pore size of 54 Å and a particle size of 4–6 nm have been prepared by template free ultrasonic mediated precipitation at room temperature. The as prepared particles have been characterized by UV–vis spectroscopy, XRD, N2 adsorption–desorption isotherms, SEM and TEM techniques. The photocatalytic hydrogen production activity for the pure, noble metal loaded and supported mesoporous CdS has been studied. The photocatalytic activity has been compared with bulk and nanosize CdS prepared in our earlier studies. Among the prepared catalysts, Pt metal loaded mesoporous CdS shows highest hydrogen production rate of 1415 μmol/h/0.1 g catalyst. In the case of supported systems, irrespective of the particle size the basic MgO support shows higher activity than alumina support.  相似文献   

12.
Mn effect and characterization on γ-Al2O3-, -Al2O3- and SiO2-supported Ru catalysts were investigated for Fischer–Tropsch synthesis under pressurized conditions. In the slurry phase Fischer–Tropsch reaction, γ-Al2O3 catalysts showed higher performance on CO conversion and C5+ selectivity than -Al2O3 and SiO2 catalysts. Moreover, Ru/Mn/γ-Al2O3 exhibited high resistance to catalyst deactivation and other catalysts were deactivated during the reaction. From characterization results on XRD, TPR, TEM, XPS and pore distribution, Ru particles were clearly observed over the catalysts, and γ-Al2O3 catalysts showed a moderate pore and particle size such as 8 nm, where -Al2O3 and SiO2 showed highly dispersed ruthenium particles. The addition of Mn to γ-Al2O3 enhanced the removal of chloride from RuCl3, which can lead to the formation of metallic Ru with moderate particle size, which would be an active site for Fischer–Tropsch reaction. Concomitantly, manganese chloride is formed. These schemes can be assigned to the stable nature of Ru/Mn/γ-Al2O3 catalyst.  相似文献   

13.
The effects of promotion with ruthenium on the structure of cobalt catalysts and their performance in Fischer–Tropsch synthesis were studied using MCM-41 and SBA-15 as catalytic supports. The catalysts were characterized by N2 physisorption, H2-temperature programmed reduction, in situ magnetic measurements, X-ray diffraction and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. It was found that monometallic cobalt catalysts supported by smaller pore mesoporous silicas (dp = 3–4 nm) had much lower activity in Fischer–Tropsch synthesis than their larger pore counterparts (dp = 5–6 nm). Promotion with ruthenium of smaller pore cobalt catalysts led to a considerable increase in Fischer–Tropsch reaction rate, while the effect of the promotion with ruthenium was less significant with the catalysts supported by larger pore silicas.Characterizations of smaller pore cobalt catalysts revealed strong impact of ruthenium promotion on the repartition of cobalt between reducible Co3O4 phase and barely reducible amorphous cobalt silicate in the calcined catalyst precursors. Smaller pore monometallic cobalt catalysts showed high fraction of barely reducible cobalt silicate. Promotion with ruthenium led to a significant increase in the fraction of reducible Co3O4 and in decrease in the amount of cobalt silicate. In both calcined monometallic and Ru-promoted cobalt catalysts supported by larger pore silicas, easy reducible Co3O4 was the dominant phase. Promotion with ruthenium of larger pore catalysts had smaller influence on cobalt dispersion, fraction of reducible cobalt phases and thus on catalytic performance.  相似文献   

14.
An extensive study of Fischer–Tropsch synthesis (FTS) on carbon nanotubes (CNT) supported and γ–alumina-supported cobalt catalysts with different amounts of cobalt are reported. Up to 40 wt.% of cobalt is added to the supports by the impregnation method. The effect of the support on the reducibility of the cobalt oxide species, dispersion of the cobalt, average cobalt clusters size, water–gas shift (WGS) activity and activity and selectivity of FTS is investigated. Using carbon nanotubes as cobalt catalyst support was found to cause the reduction temperature of cobalt oxide species to shift to lower temperatures. The strong metal-support interactions are reduced to a large extent and the reducibility of the catalysts improved significantly. CNT aided in well dispersion of metal clusters and average cobalt clusters size decreased. Results are presented showing that the hydrocarbon yield obtained by inventive CNT supported cobalt catalyst is surprisingly much larger than that obtained from cobalt on alumina supports. The maximum concentration of active surface Co° sites and FTS activity for alumina and CNT supported catalysts are achieved at 34 wt.% and 40 wt.% cobalt loading respectively. CNT caused a slight decrease in the FTS product distribution to lower molecular weight hydrocarbons.  相似文献   

15.
The effect of two binder systems — a silica-based system and a silica–kaolin–clay–phosphate-based system — on a doubly promoted Fischer–Tropsch (FT) synthesis iron catalyst (100Fe/5Cu/4.2K) was studied. The catalysts were prepared by coprecipitation, followed by binder addition and spray drying at 270°C in a 1 m diameter, 2 m tall spray dryer. The binder silica content was varied from 0 to 20 wt.%. A catalyst with 12 wt.% binder silica was found to have the highest attrition resistance. The FT activity and selectivity of this catalyst are better than a Ruhrchemie catalyst at 270°C and 1.48 MPa. The addition of precipitated silica or kaolin to catalysts containing 10–12 wt.% binder silica decreases attrition resistance and increases methane selectivity. Based on the experience gained, a catalyst has been successfully spray dried in 500 g quantity. This catalyst showed 95% CO conversion over 125 h of testing at 270°C, 1.48 MPa, and 2 NL/g-cat/h and had less than 4% methane selectivity. Its attrition resistance was one of the highest among the catalysts tested.  相似文献   

16.
Small Co clusters (d<10 nm) supported over mixed La–Co–Fe perovskites were successfully synthesized. These catalysts were active for Fischer–Tropsch (FT). Depending on the Co to Fe ratios the mixed perovskite exhibited two different forms: the rhombohedral phase of LaCoO3 is maintained for the mixed perovskite when x>0.5, the orthorhombic phase of LaFeO3 is found for x<0.5. Interestingly only one of these structures is active for the FT reaction: the orthorhombic structure. This is most likely due to the capacity of this material to maintain its structure even with a high number of cation vacancies. These cations (mostly Co) were on purpose extracted and reduced. Magnetic measurements clearly showed their metallic nature. Rhombohedral Co–Fe mixed perovskites (x≥0.5) cannot be used as precursors for Fischer–Tropsch catalysts: their partial reduction only consists in a complete reduction of Co3+ into Co2+.

The partial reduction of orthorhombic perovskites (x<0.5) leads to active Fischer–Tropsch (FT) catalysts by formation of a metal phase well dispersed on a cation-deficient perovskite. The FT activity is related to the stability of the precursor perovskite. When initially calcined at 600 °C, a maximum of 8.6 wt.% of Co0 can be extracted from LaCo0.40Fe0.60O3 (compared to only 2 wt.% after calcination at 750 °C). The catalyst is then composed of Co0 particles of 10 nm on a stable deficient perovskite LaCo0.053+Fe0.603+O2.40. Catalytic tests showed that up to 70% in the molar selectivity for hydrocarbons was obtained at 250 °C, 40% of which was composed of the C2–C4 fraction.  相似文献   


17.
Cobalt catalysts supported on silica aerogel have been prepared using sol–gel chemistry followed by drying under supercritical ethanol conditions. Three different loadings of cobalt were synthesized: 2, 6, and 10% by weight. Transmission electron micrographs indicate that the metallic cobalt exists as discrete particles 50–70 nm in diameter for the 2 and 6% loadings. The 10% catalyst shows long needles of cobalt. BET and BJH measurements indicate that the catalysts retain the silica aerogel properties of high surface area (∼800 m2/g), large pore volume (∼5 cm3/g), and an average pore diameter in the mesoporous regime (∼25 nm). The catalysts were evaluated for Fischer–Tropsch activity in a laboratory-scale packed bed reactor. All three catalysts were active with the 10% Co catalyst achieving more than 20% CO conversion which corresponds to a rate of 1.53 g CO per g-cat per hour. The catalysts were selective for the C10+ hydrocarbons with more than 50% of the carbon contained within this fraction. A significant portion of the C9–C15 hydrocarbon product was observed as 1-olefins which reflects the enhanced mass transport within the very porous aerogel support.  相似文献   

18.
The structure of cobalt species at different stages of the genesis of monometallic and Pt-promoted cobalt alumina-supported Fischer–Tropsch catalysts was studied using X-ray diffraction, UV–visible spectroscopy, in situ X-ray absorption, in situ magnetic method, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and DSC–TGA thermal analysis. The catalysts were prepared by incipient wetness impregnation using solutions of cobalt nitrate and dihydrogen hexachloroplatinate. Both variation of catalyst calcination temperature between 473 and 773 K and promotion with 0.1 wt% of Pt had no significant affect on the size of supported Co3O4 crystallites. The size of cobalt oxide particles in the calcined catalysts seems to be influenced primarily by the pore diameter of the support. Cobalt reducibility was relatively low in monometallic cobalt alumina-supported catalysts and decreased as a function of catalyst calcination temperature. The effect was probably due to the formation of mixed surface compounds between Co3O4 and Al2O3 at higher calcination temperatures, which hinder cobalt reduction. Promotion with platinum spectacularly increased the rate of cobalt reduction; the promotion seemed to reduce the activation energy of the formation of cobalt metallic phases. Analysis of the magnetization data suggests that the presence of Pt led to the reduction of smaller cobalt oxide particles, which could not be reduced at the same conditions in the cobalt monometallic catalysts. Promotion of cobalt alumina-supported catalysts with small amounts of Pt resulted in a significant increase in Fischer–Tropsch cobalt time yield. The efficient control of cobalt reducibility through catalyst calcination and promotion seems to be one of the key issues in the design of efficient cobalt alumina-supported Fischer–Tropsch catalysts.  相似文献   

19.
Cobalt catalysts (2–10 wt% Co) supported on silica-rich MCM-22 zeolites have been prepared by impregnation with aqueous Co(NO3)2 solutions. The catalysts are characterized by X-ray fluorescence (XRF), X-ray diffraction (XRD), nitrogen adsorption, solid state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). The catalytic properties for the Fischer–Tropsch synthesis (FTS) at 280 °C, 12.5 bar and H2/CO = 2 are evaluated. The catalysts supported on MCM-22 exhibit the highest selectivity to long-chain (C5+) hydrocarbons when MCM-22 supports are synthesized with the appropriate Si/Al ratio.  相似文献   

20.
Controlling preparation variables in supported cobalt Fischer–Tropsch catalysts has a dramatic effect on the dispersion and distribution of cobalt, and determines how active and selective the resulting catalyst will be. We detail specific examples of catalyst synthesis strategies for modifying interactions between the support and the cobalt precursor, promoting reduction, stabilizing catalysts to high-temperature treatments, minimizing deleterious support metal interactions, and controlling the distribution of cobalt on large support particles. It is important to optimize the support and precursor interaction strength, so that it is strong enough to obtain good dispersion but not too strong to prevent low temperature reduction. We show examples in which formation of surface complexes and epitaxial matching of precursor and support structures improves dispersion dramatically. Reduction promoters can help in those cases where support–precursor interactions are too strong. We show how substitutions of silicon into a titania lattice stabilizes surface area and retards formation at high oxidation temperatures of cobalt ternary oxides that reduce only at very high temperatures—an important consideration if oxidative coke removal is necessary. In addition, surface treatment of TiO2 with an irreducible oxide like ZrO2 can inhibit deleterious support interactions that can block surface cobalt sites. Selectivity can also be dramatically altered by catalyst synthesis. We illustrate a case of large (2 mm) SiO2 particles onto which cobalt can be added either uniformly or in discrete eggshells, with the eggshell catalysts having substantially higher C5+ selectivity. These approaches can lead to optimal Fischer–Tropsch catalysts with high activity and C5+ selectivity, good physical integrity, and a long life.  相似文献   

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