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1.
Catalytic activity of ZrO2 supported PdO catalysts for methane combustion has been investigated in comparison with Al2O3 supported PdO catalysts. It was found that the drop of catalytic activity owing to decomposition of PdO at a high temperature region (600–900°C) was suppressed by using ZrO2 support. Temperature-programmed reduction (TPR) measurements of the catalyst with hydrogen revealed that the PdO of PdO/Al2O3 catalyst was reduced at the temperature less than 100°C, whereas in PdO/ZrO2 catalyst the consumption of hydrogen was also observed at 200–300°C. This result indicates that the stable PdO species were present in the PdO/ZrO2 catalyst. In order to confirm the formation of the solid solution of PdO and ZrO2, X-ray diffraction (XRD) analyses of the mixtures of ZrO2 and PdO calcined at 700–900°C in air were carried out. The lattice volume of ZrO2 in the mixture was larger than that of ZrO2. Furthermore, the Pd thin film on ZrO2 substrate was prepared as a model catalyst and the depth profile of the elements in the Pd thin film was measured by Auger electron spectroscopy (AES). It was confirmed that Zr and O as well as Pd were present in the Pd thin film heated at 900°C in air. It was considered that the PdO on ZrO2 support might be stabilized by the formation of the solid solution of PdO and ZrO2.  相似文献   

2.
Partial oxidation of methane to synthesis gas was carried out using supported iridium–nickel bimetallic catalysts, in order to reduce loading levels of iridium and nickel, and to avoid carbon deposition on nickel-based catalysts by adding iridium. The performance of supported iridium–nickel bimetallic catalysts in synthesis gas formation depended strongly upon the support materials. La2O3 gave the best performance among the support materials tested. Ir(0.25 wt%)–Ni(0.5 wt%)/La2O3 afforded 36% conversion of methane (CH4/O2=5) to give CO and H2 with the selectivities of above 90% at 800°C, and those at 600°C were 25.3% conversion of methane and CO and H2 selectivities of about 80%, respectively. Reduced monometallic Ir(0.25 wt%)/La2O3 and Ni(0.5 wt%)/La2O3 catalysts did not produce synthesis gas at 600°C. A higher conversion of methane was obtained by synergistic effects. The product concentrations of CO, H2, and CO2, and CH4 conversion were maintained in high values, even increasing the space velocity of feed gas over Ir–Ni/La2O3 catalyst, indicating that rapid reaction takes place. As a by-product, a small amount of carbon deposition was observed, but carbon formation decreased with increasing the space velocity. On the other hand, with reduced monometallic Ni(10 wt%)/La2O3 catalyst, yield of synthesis gas and carbon decreased with increasing the space velocity.  相似文献   

3.
A knitted silica-fibre was prepared and used as support for combustion catalysts. Different Pd–MeO and Pt–MeO (Me=Ni, Co, Cu and Mn) catalysts were prepared, and their catalytic activities were investigated in the conversion of gas mixtures consisting of methane, ethene, naphthalene (model PAH), carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, nitrogen and water vapour in the temperature range 150–800°C. Combinations of Pd–Ni and Pt–Ni were found to result in decreased light-off temperatures in methane combustion. The Pd–Ni/silica-fibre catalyst exhibited a light-off temperature in methane combustion of ca 220°C lower than that obtained over the Pd/silica-fibre catalyst. Deactivation of the catalysts was observed by subjecting the catalysts to reaction mixture flow at 800°C for 6 h. For the Pd-containing catalysts, the deactivation was considered to be due to both support and metal sintering as well as changes in the nature of the Pd–O species. The catalysts were characterised by N2-adsorption, H2-adsorption, O2–TPD and H2–TPR.  相似文献   

4.
The stability of methane conversion was studied over a Pd/Al2O3 catalyst and bimetallic Pd–Pt/Al2O3 catalysts. The activity of methane combustion over Pd/Al2O3 gradually decreased with time, whereas the methane conversion over bimetallic Pd–Pt catalysts was significantly more stable. The differences in combustion behavior were further investigated by activity tests where additional water vapor was periodically added to the feed stream. From these tests it was concluded that water speeds up the degradation process of the Pd/Al2O3 catalyst, whereas the catalyst containing Pt was not affected to the same extent. DRIFTS studies in a mixture of oxygen and methane revealed that both catalysts produce surface hydroxyls during combustion, although the steady state concentration on the pure Pd catalyst is higher for a fixed temperature and water partial pressure. The structure of the bimetallic catalyst grains with a PdO domain and a Pd–Pt alloy domain may be the reason for the higher stability, as the PdO domain appears to be more affected by the water generated in the combustion reaction than the alloy. Not all fuels that produce water during combustion will have stability issues. It appears that less strong binding in the fuel molecule will compensate for the degradation.  相似文献   

5.
The lean selective catalytic reduction of NOx by methane over protonic palladium loaded ZSM-5, FER and MOR, as well as, on bimetallic Pd–Pt-HMOR was examined. Special emphasis was paid on the combined effects of water and SO2 in the feed stream. Under dry conditions and in the absence of SO2, the degree of NOx conversion at 450°C decreases as follows: Pd-HZSM-5>Pd-HMOR>Pd-HFER. Sulfur dioxide alone has no apparent effect on the activity for NOx reduction, but the coexistence of water and SO2 inhibits both NOx and methane conversions. The extent of inhibition by water and SO2 on NOx reduction is Pd-HFER>Pd-HZSM-5>Pd-HMOR. Acid mordenite doped with low levels of Pt and Pd leads to an active catalyst that is more tolerant to the presence of either water or SO2 than the corresponding monometallic Pt- and Pd-HMOR. Nevertheless, NOx reduction is also inhibited at temperatures below 450°C when SO2 and water are both present. TPD experiments of water over calcined samples of protonic Pd supported pentasil zeolites, Pd/γ-Al2O3 and Pt–Pd-HMOR with and without pretreatment in SO2+O2 indicate that sulfation of the surface increases water chemisorption by the support. Therefore, the observed decrease of NOx reduction on Pd-loaded zeolite catalysts when SO2 and H2O coexist in the feed stream may be due to enhanced water inhibition and presumably active site poisoning.  相似文献   

6.
The kinetics of the catalytic combustion of methane by supported palladium oxide catalysts (2 wt.-% Pd/La2O3·11A12O3 and 5 wt.-%Pd/ γ-A1203 were examined for several oxygen partial pressure levels over the temperature range from 40–900°C using temperature-programmed reaction and slow ramp and hold temperature-time transient techniques. Combustion rates were measured by differential reaction in a fixed bed of powdered catalyst at lower temperatures (200–500°C). Also, by preparing the catalysts as thin (ca. 10 μm) coatings on an alumina tube and conducting the experiments with very high flows of dilute methane and oxygen in helium, the rate measurements were extended up to 900°C without significant contribution from gas phase reactions. The specific combustion activity of supported PdO shows a persistent hysteresis between 450 and 750°C, i.e., the rate of combustion between these temperature limits depends strongly on whether the catalyst is cooling from above 750°C or heating from below 450°C. This region is also notable for negative apparent activation energy in the rate of methane oxidation, i.e., the rate increases with decreasing temperature during reoxidation of the Pd metal and decreases with increasing temperature (especially with low oxygen partial pressure) prior to decomposition of the bulk oxide. Detailed time-temperature transient kinetic analyses were performed for supported PdO catalysts within the 450–750°C temperature range. The hysteresis in methane combustion rate is caused by a higher activation energy for reduction of oxygen chemisorbed on metallic Pd and by suppressed reoxidation of Pd metal relative to PdO decomposition.  相似文献   

7.
Catalytic combustion concept for gas turbines   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Catalytic combustion for gas turbines was investigated, based on a partial catalytic combustion section followed by a homogeneous combustion zone. A pressurized test rig (<25 bar) was built to test the influence of various parameters on this concept using Pd and Pt catalysts.

The pressure influence on the apparent catalytic reaction rate was of the order 0.4, assuming that the reaction kinetics could be described by a power rate function which was of first order with respect to methane. Pd catalysts showed a pressure-dependent temperature for the transition of the active PdO to the much less active Pd. Combining Pd and Pt within one catalyst resulted in a considerably lower transition temperature.

Homogeneous combustion reactions set on from 650°C, depending on the methane concentration, pressure and flow. With inlet temperatures above 800°C the homogeneous combustion always started. At outlet temperatures below 1050°C high CO concentrations could be measured. At higher temperatures the CO, CH4 and NOx concentrations were lower than 5 ppm. During several experiments total conversion of CH4 and CO was observed.  相似文献   


8.
This paper deals with the activity of bimetallic potassium–copper and potassium–cobalt catalysts supported on alumina for the reduction of NOx with soot from simulated diesel engine exhaust. The effect of the reaction temperature, the soot/catalyst mass ratio and the presence of C3H6 has been studied. In addition, the behavior of two monometallic catalysts supported on zeolite beta (Co/beta and Cu/beta), previously used for NOx reduction with C3H6, as well as a highly active HC-SCR catalyst (Pt/beta) has been tested for comparison. The preliminary results obtained in the absence of C3H6 indicate that, at temperatures between 250 and 400 °C, the use of bimetallic potassium catalysts notably increases the rate of NOx reduction with soot evolving N2 and CO2 as main reaction products. At higher temperatures, the catalysts mainly favor the direct soot combustion with oxygen. In the presence of C3H6, an increase in the activity for NOx reduction has been observed for the catalyst with the highest metal content. At 450 °C, the copper-based catalysts (Cu/beta and KCu2/Al2O3) show the highest activity for both NOx reduction (to N2 and CO2) and soot consumption. The Pt/beta catalyst does not combine, at any temperature, a high NOx reduction with a high soot consumption rate.  相似文献   

9.
ZrO2–TiO2 mixed oxide (30–70 mol/mol) was prepared by low-temperature sol–gel followed by solvo-thermal treatment (1 day) at various temperatures (40, 80, 120, 160 and 200 °C). Selected samples of the corresponding single oxides were also prepared. Materials characterization was carried out by N2 physisorption, XRD, thermal analysis (TG-DTA) and UV–vis DRS, infra-red and Laser-Raman spectroscopies. Binary solids of enhanced pore volume and pore size diameter were obtained by increasing the post-treatment severity. Anatase TiO2 micro-segregation was evidenced by Raman spectroscopy for the mixed oxide solvo-treated at the highest temperature. This solid also showed the highest crystallization temperature to ZrTiO4 (702 °C). Mo impregnated (2.8 atom nm−2) on various mixed oxides was sulfided under H2S/H2 (400 °C, 1 h), the catalysts being tested in the dibenzothiophene hydrodesulfurization (HDS, T = 320 °C, P = 5.59 MPa). By increasing the severity of the solvo-treatment improved supports for MoS2 phase were obtained. The HDS activity of the catalyst with carrier post-treated at 200 °C was 40% higher (in per total mass basis) than that of sulfided Mo supported on the binary oxide solvo-treated at 80 °C. The ZrO2–TiO2-supported catalysts showed higher selectivity to products from the hydrogenation route than their counterparts supported on either single oxide.  相似文献   

10.
Palladium cation exchanged zeolites (ZSM-5, mordenite and ferrierite) were studied as catalysts for methane combustion. Pd-zeolites showed much higher activities than PdO/Al2O3. For comparable palladium loadings, PdO/Al2O3 requires a reaction temperature of ca. 70–80°C higher than Pd-ZSM-5 for conversions between 50–100%. The catalytic activity of Pd-ZSM-5 seems to be related to its reducibility. Temperature-programmed reduction experiments with carbon monoxide showed a lower reduction temperature (ca. 157°C) for Pd-ZSM-5 than for PdO/Al2O3 (225°C). Further, the positioning of the palladium by ion exchange offers a highly dispersed form of PdII supported on the high surface area zeolite.  相似文献   

11.
Performance data are presented for methane oxidation on alumina-supported Pd, Pt, and Rh catalysts under both fuel-rich and fuel-lean conditions. Catalyst activity was measured in a micro-scale isothermal reactor at temperatures between 300 and 800 °C. Non-isothermal (near adiabatic) temperature and reaction data were obtained in a full-length (non-differential) sub-scale reactor operating at high pressure (0.9 MPa) and constant inlet temperature, simulating actual reactor operation in catalytic combustion applications.

Under fuel-lean conditions, Pd catalyst was the most active, although deactivation occurred above 650 °C, with reactivation upon cooling. Rh catalyst also deactivated above 750 °C, but did not reactivate. Pt catalyst was active above 600 °C. Fuel-lean reaction products were CO2 and H2O for all three catalysts.

The same catalysts tested under fuel-rich conditions demonstrated much higher activity. In addition, a ‘lightoff’ temperature was found (between 450 and 600 °C), where a stepwise increase in reaction rate was observed. Following ‘lightoff’ partial oxidation products (CO, H2) appeared in the mixture, and their concentration increased with increasing temperature. All three catalysts exhibited this behavior.

High-pressure (0.9 MPa) sub-scale reactor and combustor data are shown, demonstrating the benefits of fuel-rich operation over the catalyst for ultra-low emissions combustion.  相似文献   


12.
Methane combustion over Pd/Al2O3 catalysts with and without added Pt and CeO2 in both oxygen-rich and methane-rich mixtures at temperatures in the range 250–520°C has been investigated using a temperature-programmed reaction procedure with on-line gas analysis (FTIR). During the temperature loop under oxygen-rich conditions, there was an appreciable hysteresis in the activity of unmodified Pd/Al2O3, which was greatly enhanced over Pd–Pt/Al2O3. Over both catalysts the hysteresis was reversed under slightly methane-rich atmospheres, and as temperature was reduced, a sudden collapse or fluctuations in activity were shown respectively over Pd–Pt/Al2O3 and Pd/Al2O3. Such non-steady behaviour was almost eliminated over Pd/Al2O3–CeO2. Under a very narrow range of conditions and over a Pd/Al2O3 packed bed, oscillation of methane combustion was observed.  相似文献   

13.
The influence of catalyst pre-treatment temperature (650 and 750 °C) and oxygen concentration (λ = 8 and 1) on the light-off temperature of methane combustion has been investigated over two composite oxides, Co3O4/CeO2 and Co3O4/CeO2–ZrO2 containing 30 wt.% of Co3O4. The catalytic materials prepared by the co-precipitation method were calcined at 650 °C for 5 h (fresh samples); a portion of them was further treated at 750 °C for 7 h, in a furnace in static air (aged samples).

Tests of methane combustion were carried out on fresh and aged catalysts at two different WHSV values (12 000 and 60 000 mL g−1 h−1). The catalytic performance of Co3O4/CeO2 and Co3O4/CeO2–ZrO2 were compared with those of two pure Co3O4 oxides, a sample obtained by the precipitation method and a commercial reference. Characterization studies by X-ray diffraction (XRD), BET and temperature-programmed reduction (TPR) show that the catalytic activity is related to the dispersion of crystalline phases, Co3O4/CeO2 and Co3O4/CeO2–ZrO2 as well as to their reducibility. Particular attention was paid to the thermal stability of the Co3O4 phase in the temperature range of 750–800 °C, in both static (in a furnace) and dynamic conditions (continuous flow). The results indicate that the thermal stability of the phase Co3O4 heated up to 800 °C depends on the size of the cobalt oxide crystallites (fresh or aged samples) and on the oxygen content (excess λ = 8, stoichiometric λ = 1) in the reaction mixture. A stabilizing effect due to the presence of ceria or ceria–zirconia against Co3O4 decomposition into CoO was observed.

Moreover, the role of ceria and ceria–zirconia is to maintain a good combustion activity of the cobalt composite oxides by dispersing the active phase Co3O4 and by promoting the reduction at low temperature.  相似文献   


14.
The activity of the various CuO species found in supported copper catalysts and the effect of the presence of reaction products, CO2 and H2O, was studied during the complete oxidation of methane. Series of copper catalysts supported on ZrO2, Al2O3 and SiO2 with different metal concentrations were analyzed under identical experimental conditions of reactant concentration and temperature. The catalysts were characterized by TPR, UV–vis spectroscopy and XRD. The results show that the activity of supported CuO is closely related to the kind of Cu species formed on the different supports. It was found that the Cu species formed on ZrO2 and Al2O3 are dependent on the metal loading/support's surface area ratio, and that the activity of highly dispersed Cu is substantially higher than that of bulk CuO. In the case of silica, only the formation of bulk CuO was detected, accounting for the low activity of CuO/SiO2 catalysts. The activity of highly dispersed Cu species formed on ZrO2 is higher than those formed over Al2O3, and it is not significantly affected by the formation of bulk CuO on the surface. On the contrary, the activity of copper species formed on alumina decreases continuously as the Cu loading is increased. Thus, for the range of copper loading studied in this work, the activity of the catalysts, per gram of loaded Cu, follows the sequence: CuO/ZrO2 > CuO/Al2O3  CuO/SiO2. It was also found that CO2 does not inhibits the activity of the CuO/ZrO2 catalysts, while water inhibits the combustion reaction of methane, with an estimated reaction order of about −0.2 for temperatures between 360 °C and 420 °C.  相似文献   

15.
The aim of this work was to identify the optimum synthesis conditions and the most effective technique for noble metal deposition in a perovskite/palladium-based catalyst for natural gas combustion. The solution combustion synthesis (SCS) of perovskite/zirconia-based materials was investigated, by starting from metal nitrates/glycine mixtures. Characterization and catalytic activity tests were performed on as-prepared powders and then repeated after calcination for 2 h at 900 °C in calm air. Calcination appeared to be beneficial in that, despite lowering the specific surface area, it promoted the simultaneous crystallization of both LaMnO3 and ZrO2 and the half-conversion temperature (T50), regarded as an index of catalytic activity, was lowered. Two phases, both active towards methane oxidation – lanthanum manganate and palladium oxide – were combined so as to evaluate their synergism in terms of catalytic activity. Pd was therefore added either via incipient wetness impregnation on LaMnO3·2ZrO2 or through a one-step SCS-based route. Characterization and catalytic activity tests followed suit. Optimal composition and preparation routes were found: T50 was lowered from 507 °C – pure LaMnO3 prepared via SCS – to 432 °C attained with a 2% (w/w) Pd load on pre-calcined LaMnO3·2ZrO2.  相似文献   

16.
The development of improved substrate properties for catalytic combustion has been an area of much interest in recent years. Towards this end, Precision Combustion Inc. has developed novel short channel length, high cell density substrates (trademarked Microlith®) and high surface area ceramic coatings for them. These substrates avoid substantial boundary layer buildup and greatly enhance heat and mass transfer rates in reactors. The high cell density of these substrates results in high amount of the catalyst per unit of reactor volume. In this paper we examine the performance of these substrates coated with precious metal catalysts for the catalytic combustion and reforming of methane.

Under fuel-lean operating conditions the surface temperature of Pd-based catalyst supported on Microlith® substrate and the temperature of the gas exiting the reactor remain stable at 800 °C over a wide range of inlet conditions. This is attributed to combination of enhanced transport properties and characteristics of Pd–PdO transformation. Preheating of the gas mixture in the Microlith® reactor was sufficient to stabilize a downstream premixed flame with NOx, CO, and UHC emissions in the single digit ppm range.

Microlith® substrates were also examined for partial oxidation of methane under fuel-rich conditions. The enhanced transport properties of the Microlith® substrate allowed complete conversion of methane with surface temperature not exceeding material limits at 93% selectivity to partial oxidation products. High flow rate of reactants result in extremely high power densities and syngas output. The catalyst performance was observed to be stable over 500 h of operation.  相似文献   


17.
Three different reducing agents, ethylene glycol (EG), formaldehyde (HCHO), and sodium borohydrate (NaBH4), were used in the synthesis of carbon-supported Pd–Co catalysts (Pd–Co/C–EG, Pd–Co/C–HCHO, and Pd–Co/C–NaBH4, respectively). The differences among these three catalysts in morphology and electrocatalytic activity for oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) were observed and characterized using X-ray diffraction, energy dispersive X-ray analysis, transmission electron microscope, Fourier transform infrared spectra, surface cyclic voltametry, and rotating disk electrode technique. It was observed that by using a mild reducing agent such as EG, well-controlled and homogenous nucleation and growth could be achieved during the catalyst synthesis. With respect to the morphology and ORR activity of synthesized catalysts, the order of preferred reducing agents was found to be EG > NaBH4 > HCHO. In order to improve activity and stability, the catalysts were heat-treated at temperatures ranging from 300 °C to 700 °C. It was found that for all three Pd–Co/C catalysts, a temperature of 300 °C gave the best catalyst morphology and ORR activity. The investigation in ORR kinetics catalyzed by these three catalysts revealed that all three could catalyze a four-electron reduction of oxygen to produce water. The average Tafel slope of the catalyzed ORR was found to be 70 mV/dec, suggesting that the determining step in the mechanism is a one-electron transfer process. In an effort to validate the theoretical explanation, the ORR activity as a function of particle size, Pd lattice constant, and Pd–Pd bond distance of the three Pd–Co/C catalysts was also investigated. In addition, in the case of EG as reducing agent the impregnation–reduction method employed in this work was simplified, because the need for a stabilizing agent usage was removed and water was used as the solvent.  相似文献   

18.
Niobium-supported palladium-based catalysts (Pd, Pd–Cu and Pd–Au) were employed in the oxidation of ethanal. The catalysts were prepared according to original methods by either multi-steps (anchoring of complexes, calcination and reduction) or one-step (photoassisted reduction) procedures. The oxidation of ethanal was carried out in gas phase in a dynamic-differential reactor at 300 °C at atmospheric pressure. The activity/selectivity of the catalysts depend on (i) the catalyst preparation; (ii) the presence of a second metal. Addition of Au or Cu decreases the catalysts deactivation and the best performance in total oxidation was obtained with Pd–Au/Nb2O5 prepared by photoassisted reduction. As shown by in situ IR spectroscopy of adsorbed CO, this peculiarity may be ascribed to Au→Pd electron donation, which prevents the surface oxidation of palladium particles.  相似文献   

19.
Supported Pd–Pt catalysts are efficient for hydrodesulfurization (HDS) and hydrodearomatization (HDA) reactions of diesel fuel and their activity varied with the kinds of supports. Concerning HDA, alumina supported catalysts showed four times higher TOF (turn over frequency) than silica supported one. In order to elucidate the difference in activity, the structural analysis of the active phase was performed. After reduction pretreatment, relatively uniform and large metallic alloy Pd–Pt particles were formed on SiO2, whereas, Pd and Pt atoms formed rather segregated particles on Al2O3. Subsequent X-ray absorption of fine structure (XAFS) analysis under HDS conditions showed no contribution of sulfur for SiO2 supported catalyst, whereas, formation of sulfided metal species was observed in XAFS spectra for the Al2O3 supported catalyst. It is suggested that on Pd–Pt/SiO2, thin sulfide layer on the metal cluster surface blocked the active sites and lowered the HDA activity. Presence of partially sulfided phase originated from rather segregated structure like Pd–Pt/Al2O3 is thought to be requisite for high HDA activity.  相似文献   

20.
The catalytic performance of cobalt catalysts supported on γ-Al2O3, TiO2, ZrO2 were studied for bio-ethanol steam reforming (BESR) reaction. The supported catalysts (10 wt%Co) were prepared by impregnation and characterized through Thermogravimetric analysis (TGA), H2 chemisorption, laser Raman Spectroscopy, Diffuse Reflectance Infrared Fourier Transform Spectroscopy (DRIFTS), and temperature-programmed reaction (TPRxn). The metallic cobalt sites were found to correlate with the BESR reaction activity. The reaction and H2 chemisorption showed that ZrO2 supported catalyst showed the best dispersion and best catalytic activity. Over the 10% Co/ZrO2 catalyst, using a H2O:EtOH:inert molar ratio of 10:1:75 and a GHSV = 5000 h−1, 100% ethanol conversion and a yield of 5.5 mol H2/mol EtOH were obtained at 550 °C and atmospheric pressure.  相似文献   

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