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1.
The catalytic activity of Pt on alumina catalysts, with and without MnOx incorporated to the catalyst formulation, for CO oxidation in H2-free as well as in H2-rich stream (PROX) has been studied in the temperature range of 25–250 °C. The effect of catalyst preparation (by successive impregnation or by co-impregnation of Mn and Pt) and Mn content in the catalyst performance has been studied. A low Mn content (2 wt.%) has been found not to improve the catalyst activity compared to the base catalyst. However, catalysts prepared by successive impregnation with 8 and 15 wt.% Mn have shown a lower operation temperature for maximum CO conversion than the base catalyst with an enhanced catalyst activity at low temperatures with respect to Pt/Al2O3. A maximum CO conversion of 89.8%, with selectivity of 44.9% and CO yield of 40.3% could be reached over a catalyst with 15 wt.% Mn operating at 139 °C and λ = 2. The effect of the presence of 5 vol.% CO2 and 5 vol.% H2O in the feedstream on catalysts performance has also been studied and discussed. The presence of CO2 in the feedstream enhances the catalytic performance of all the studied catalysts at high temperature, whereas the presence of steam inhibits catalysts with higher MnOx content.  相似文献   

2.
In this review, recent works related to the selective CO removal in a H2-rich stream for the application of the low-temperature fuel cell are discussed. The membrane separation, the selective CO hydrogenation, and the preferential CO oxidation (PROX) have been generally studied to meet the requirement for the polymer electrolyte membrane fuel cell (PEMFC) where the CO concentration should be controlled to be less than 10 ppm not to degrade the electrochemical performance of Pt anode. For the membrane separation, the thin layer of Pd-based alloy metal on the porous ceramic material coupled with the catalytic purification is the most advanced method at present. For PROX catalysts, supported Ru catalysts and Pt-based alloy catalysts have been successfully developed so far. The combination of highly selective PROX catalysts and the CO methanation catalyst can provide the extended temperature range to achieve the acceptable CO removal. Because each method has presently its own weak points, the further advance is still in need. The non-noble metal-based membrane requiring smaller pressure differentials is highly plausible in the membrane separation. The highly selective catalyst for CO methanation in the presence of excess CO2 and H2O can simplify the CO removal step. The PROX catalyst should be operative over a wide reaction temperature as well as at low temperatures not to cause the reverse water–gas shift reaction. During the development of these catalysts, the progress on the high-temperature PEM fuel cell or the CO-tolerant anode should be carefully evaluated.  相似文献   

3.
A bimetallic PtGe catalyst was prepared by a controlled surface reaction and studied for the PROX reaction. The good activity of the bimetallic catalyst can be assigned to the presence of a “noble metal-oxidized metal promoter” ensemble site in close contact, the noble metal (Pt) being the CO adsorption site and the oxidized metal promoter (Ge) the O2 adsorption site. The stability of the PtGe clusters is confirmed by the EXAFS spectra and activity measurements in the preferential oxidation reaction that show similar values for samples subjected to different oxidation–reduction cycles.  相似文献   

4.
The present work has been undertaken to tailor Pt/Al2O3 catalysts active for NO oxidation even after severe heat treatments in air. For this purpose, the addition of Pd has been attempted, which is less active for this reaction but can effectively suppress thermal sintering of the active metal Pt. Various Pd-modified Pt/Al2O3 catalysts were prepared, subjected to heat treatments in air at 800 and 830 °C, and then applied for NO oxidation at 300 °C. The total NO oxidation activity was shown to be significantly enhanced by the addition of Pd, depending on the amount of Pd added. The Pd-modified catalysts are active even after the severe heat treatment at 830 °C for a long time of 60 h. The optimized Pd-modified Pt/Al2O3 catalyst can show a maximum activity limited by chemical equilibrium under the conditions used. The bulk structures of supported noble metal particles were examined by XRD and their surface properties by CO chemisorption and EDX-TEM. From these characterization results as well as the reaction ones, the size of individual metal particles, the chemical composition of their surfaces, and the overall TOF value were determined for discussing possible reasons for the improvement of the thermal stability and the enhanced catalytic activity of Pt/Al2O3 catalysts by the Pd addition. The Pd-modified Pt/Al2O3 catalysts should be a promising one for NO oxidation of practical interest.  相似文献   

5.
Cerium oxide is a major additive in three-way catalysts used in emission control of automobile exhaust. Pt/CeO2 was studied in order to better understand the role of ceria in promoting CO oxidation reaction. The kinetics of carbon monoxide oxidation on Pt/cerium oxide catalyst, was studied over the temperature range 100–170°C. Steady state kinetic measurements of CO oxidation were obtained in a computer controlled micro-CSTR reactor. Activation energies were reported to vary between 39·5 and 51·2 kJ mol−1. At low concentrations of either reactant (CO, O2) and total conversion, the catalyst exhibited multiple steady states, similar to the multiplicity behavior of Pt/Al2O3. The total conversion was reached at 120°C. In comparison, the total conversion at low reactant concentrations was reached at a temperature of 148°C for the alumina-supported catalyst. Langmuir–Hinshelwood mechanisms gave a good fit to the data. However, no single rate expression could effectively describe the CO oxidation data over the whole concentration in the product of the CSTR reactor. The facts gathered indicate that oxygen adsorbed on interfacial Pt/Ce sites and ceria lattice oxygen provides oxygen for CO oxidation. Cerium oxide has been found to lower CO oxidation activation energy, enhance reaction activity and tends to suppress the usual CO inhibition effect.  相似文献   

6.
Pt–Co/Al2O3 catalysts were prepared with different Co/Pt weight ratios (0.3–1.8) and their performances for preferential oxidation of CO (PROX) were tested. The activity of the catalyst increased with Co/Pt weight ratio due to the increase of the area of active phase by interaction between Pt and Co species. The 13-layered micro-channel reactor was prepared by stacking the plates coated with Pt–Co/Al2O3 catalyst. The reactor was divided into three parts (inlet, middle, and outlet) to evaluate the performance of each part. Most of O2 supplied was depleted at the inlet part and the temperature gradient of the reactor occurred due to the high exothermicity of oxidations of CO and hydrogen. In order to prevent hot spot and temperature gradient, the reactor with non-uniform distribution of the catalyst (partially coating the catalyst on the channels) was prepared. The prepared reactor showed uniform temperature distribution and exhibited excellent performance for PROX.  相似文献   

7.
Catalytic oxidation activity of carbon-black (CB) simulating the soot of diesel particulate matters to CO2 over 3Pt/Al2O3, 3Pt5Mn/Al2O3 and 3Pt/30Ba–Al2O3 catalysts is investigated with model gases of diesel emission. In case of the large amount of CB compared to the amount of catalyst (3/1, w/w) in the mixture sample, insufficient oxygen at the point of sudden increase in the amount of CO2 is leaded to the partial oxidation using the lattice oxygen of the catalyst. And the peaks of CO2 after the first peak were attributed to the regional combustion of the CB, which was not in contact with catalyst particles. The fresh 3Pt5Mn was estimated to the oxidation states on the catalyst surface by XPS. For used sample at 700 °C, the BEs of Pt 4d5 was revealed to metallic state Pt(0) (314.4 eV) in a predominant levels compared with Pt(II) (317.3 eV). While BEs of Mn 2p were similar to that obtained from the fresh 3Pt5Mn. It is suggested that Pt is in charge of the roles in CB-oxidation, using the lattice oxygen of the catalyst. Two-stage catalytic system with the strategies of promoting the soot oxidation and NOx reduction, simultaneously, were composed of the CB oxidation catalyst and the diesel oxidation catalyst. The catalytic oxidation of CB was accelerated by activated oxidants and exothermic reaction resulted from the diesel oxidation catalyst, which lies in upstream of two-stage. But the system with the CB oxidation catalyst sited in the upstream showed the initiation of CB oxidation at a lower temperature than the other case. Two-stage catalytic system composed of 3Pt5Mn with CB in the upstream and DOC in the downstream showed high oxidation activity with 95% consumption rate of CB to the total loaded CB in the range of 100–500 °C during the TPR process.  相似文献   

8.
Electrochemical activities and structural features of Pt/Sn catalysts supported by hydrogen-reduced SnO2 nanowires (SnO2NW) are studied, using cyclic voltammetry, CO stripping voltammetry, scanning electron microscopy, and X-ray diffraction analysis. The SnO2NW supports have been grown on a carbon paper which is commercially available for gas diffusion purposes. Partial reduction of SnO2NW raises the CO tolerance of the Pt/Sn catalyst considerably. The zero-valence tin plays a significant role in lowering the oxidation potential of COads. For a carbon paper electrode loaded with 0.1 mg cm−2 Pt and 0.4 mg cm−2 SnO2NW, a conversion of 54% SnO2NW into Sn metal (0.17 mg cm−2) initiates the COads oxidation reaction at 0.08 V (vs. Ag/AgCl), shifts the peak position by 0.21 V, and maximizes the CO tolerance. Further reduction damages the support structure, reduces the surface area, and deteriorates the catalytic activity. The presence of Sn metal enhances the activities of both methanol and ethanol oxidation, with a more pronounced effect on the oxidation current of ethanol whose optimal value is analogous to those of PtSn/C catalysts reported in literature. In comparison with a commercial PtRu/C catalyst, the optimal Pt/Sn/SnO2NW/CP exhibits a somewhat inferior activity toward methanol, and a superior activity toward ethanol oxidation.  相似文献   

9.
In order to elucidate the effect of sodium on the activity of ZSM-5 supported metal oxides catalysts (ZnO–Al2O3/ZSM-5 and SnO–Al2O3/ZSM-5) for the transesterification of soybean oil with methanol, ZSM-5 supported metal oxides were prepared with and without sodium hydroxide by impregnation. The metal compositions of the ZSM-5 supported metal oxide catalysts and the metal concentrations dissolved from the catalysts to the methylester phase were measured by SEM-EDS and inductive coupled plasma spectroscopy, respectively. The catalytic activity of ZnO–Al2O3/ZSM-5 and SnO–Al2O3/ZSM-5 containing sodium did not originate from surface metal oxides sites, but from surface sodium sites or dissolved sodium leached from the catalyst surface.  相似文献   

10.
The Cu/ZnO/Al2O3 catalysts, prepared by co-precipitation method, have been modified by adding small amount of Mn, Mg, Zr, Cr, Ba, W and Ce oxides using design of experiments (1/16 full factorial design). The structure and morphology of catalysts were studied by X-ray diffraction (XRD) and BET. Performance of the prepared catalysts for CO/CO2 hydrogenation to methanol was evaluated by using a stainless steel fixed-bed reactor at 5 MPa and 513 K. The oxide additives were found to influence the catalytic activity, dispersion of Cu, Cu crystallite size, surface composition of catalyst and stability of catalysts during their operations. The results showed that the Mn and Zr promoted catalysts have high performance for methanol synthesis from syngas.  相似文献   

11.
A novel catalyst Ir–FeO x /Al2O3 designed for the preferential oxidation (PROX) of CO under excess hydrogen was developed in this work. To clarify the promoting role of Fe species, three different impregnation sequences were employed, and the resultant catalysts were characterized by various techniques. The results showed that the Ir–FeO x /Al2O3 catalyst, which was prepared by the co-impregnation procedure, exhibited the best performance for the PROX. The partially exposed and highly dispersed Ir sites and the FeO x sites allowed good adsorption for both CO and O2 over the Ir–FeO x /Al2O3, which was believed to be responsible for the enhanced activity.  相似文献   

12.
A series of noble metal (Pt, Ru or Pd) promoted Co/Al2O3 catalysts were prepared by sequential impregnation method. The catalysts were characterized by XRD, TPR, H2-TPD and TPSR techniques, and their catalytic performance in Fischer–Tropsch synthesis was investigated in a fixed-bed reactor. The results of activity measurements show that the addition of small amounts of noble metal greatly improved the activity of the Co/Al2O3 catalyst. TPR experimental results demonstrate that hydrogen spillover from the noble metal to cobalt oxide clusters facilitated the reduction of cobalt oxide and, thus significantly increased the reducibility of Co/Al2O3 catalyst. The presence of noble metal increased the amount of chemisorbed hydrogen and weakened the bond strength of Co–H. TPSR results indicate that CO was adsorbed in a more reactive state on the promoted catalysts.  相似文献   

13.
Feng-Yim Chang  Ming-Yen Wey 《Fuel》2010,89(8):1919-1927
SO2 and HCl are major pollutants emitted from waste incineration processes. Both pollutants are difficult to remove completely and can enter the catalytic reactor. In this work, the effects of SO2 and HCl on the performance of Rh/Al2O3 and Rh-Na/Al2O3 catalysts for NO removal were investigated in simulated waste incineration conditions. The characterizations of the catalysts were analyzed by BET, SEM/EDS, XRD, and ESCA. Experimental results indicated the 1%Rh/Al2O3 catalyst was significantly deactivated for NO and CO conversions when SO2 and HCl coexisted in the flue gas. The addition of between 2 and 10 wt.% Na promoted the activity of the 1%Rh/Al2O3 catalyst for NO removal, but decreased the CO oxidation and BET surface area. The catalytic activity for NO removal was inhibited by HCl as a result of the formation of RhCl3. Adding Na to the Rh/Al2O3 catalyst decreased the inhibition of SO2 because of the formation of Na2SO4, which was observed in the XRD and ESCA analyses. SEM mapping/EDS showed that more S was residual on the surface of the Rh-Na/Al2O3 catalyst than Cl.  相似文献   

14.
This paper presents some important results of the studies on preparation and catalytic properties of nanodispersed Au/Al2O3 catalysts for low-temperature CO oxidation, which are carried out at the Boreskov Institute of Catalysis (BIC) starting from 2001. The catalysts with a gold loading of 1–2 wt.% were prepared via deposition of Au complexes onto different aluminas by means of various techniques (“deposition-precipitation” (DP), incipient wetness, “chemical liquid-phase grafting” (CLPG), chemical vapor deposition (CVD)). These catalysts have been characterized comparatively by a number of physical methods (XRD, TEM, diffuse reflectance UV/vis and XPS) and catalytically tested for combustion of CO impurity (1%) in wet air stream at near-ambient temperature. Using the hydroxide or chloride gold complexes capable of chemical interaction with the surface groups of alumina as the catalyst precursors (DP and incipient wetness techniques, respectively) produces the catalysts that contain metallic Au particles mainly of 2–4 nm in diameter, uniformly distributed between the external and internal surfaces of the support granules together with the surface “ionic” Au oxide species. Application of organogold precursors gives the supported Au catalysts of egg shell type which are either close by mean Au particle size to what we obtain by DP and incipient wetness techniques (CVD of (CH3)2Au(acac) vapor on highly dehydrated Al2O3 in a rotating reactor under static conditions) or contain Au crystallites of no less than 7 nm in size (CLPG method). Regardless of deposition technique, only the Cl-free Au/Al2O3 catalysts containing the small Au particles (di ≤ 5 nm) reveal the high catalytic activity toward CO oxidation under near-ambient conditions, the catalyst stability being provided by adding the water vapor into the reaction feed. The results of testing of the nanodispersed Au/Al2O3 catalysts under conditions which simulate in part removal of CO from ambient air or diesel exhaust are discussed in comparison with the data obtained for the commercial Pd and Pt catalysts under the same conditions.  相似文献   

15.
The effect of noble metal addition on the catalytic properties of Co/Al2O3 was evaluated for the steam reforming of methane. Co/Al2O3 catalysts were prepared with addition of different noble metals (Pt, Pd, Ru and Ir 0.3 wt.%) by a wetness impregnation method and characterized by UV–vis spectroscopy, temperature programmed reduction (TPR) and temperature programmed oxidation (TPO) of the reduced catalysts. The UV–vis spectra of the samples indicate that, most likely, large amounts of the supported cobalt form Co species in which cobalt is in octahedral and tetrahedral symmetries. No peaks assigned to cobalt species from aluminate were found for the promoted and unpromoted cobalt catalysts. TPO analyses showed that the addition of the noble metals on the Co/Al2O3 catalyst leads to a more stable metallic state and less susceptible to the deactivation process during the reforming reaction. The Co/Al2O3 promoted with Pt showed higher stability and selectivity for H2production during the methane steam reforming.  相似文献   

16.
This study provides insight into the effect of Pt dispersion on the overall rate and product distribution during NOx storage and reduction. The storage and reduction performance of Pt/BaO/A2O3 monoliths with varied Pt dispersion (3%, 8%, and 50%) and fixed Pt (2.48 wt.%) and BaO (13.0 wt.%) loadings is reported. At low temperature (<200 °C), the differences in storage and reduction activity were the largest between the three catalysts. The amount of NOx stored increased with increased dispersion, as did the amount of stored NOx that was reduced. These trends are attributed to larger Pt surface area and Pt–BaO interfacial perimeter, the latter of which enhances the spillover of surface species between the precious metal and storage components. At high temperature (370 °C), the stored NOx was almost completely regenerated for the three catalysts. However, the regeneration of the 3% dispersion catalyst was much slower, suggesting a rate limitation involving the reverse spillover of stored NOx to Pt and/or of adsorbed hydrogen from Pt to BaO. The results indicate that the catalyst dispersion and operating conditions may be tuned to achieve the desired ammonia selectivity. For the aerobic regeneration feed, the most (net) NH3 was generated by the 50% dispersion catalyst at the lowest temperature (125 °C), by the 3% dispersion catalyst at the highest temperature (340 °C), and by the 8% dispersion catalyst at the intermediate temperatures (170–290 °C). Similar trends were observed for the net production of NH3 with an anaerobic regeneration feed. A phenomenological picture is proposed that describes the effects of Pt dispersion consistent with the established spatio-temporal behavior of the lean NOx trap.  相似文献   

17.
Fresh and mildly aged Pt/Al2O3 model diesel oxidation catalysts with small and large noble metal particle size have been studied during CO oxidation under lean burn reaction conditions to gain more insight into the structure and oscillatory reaction behaviour. The catalytic performance, CO adsorption characteristics using in situ DRIFTS and oxidation state using in situ XAS were correlated. Stable and pronounced oscillations only occurred over the catalyst with smaller particle sizes. Characteristic for this catalyst are low-coordinated surface Pt sites (more corner and edge atoms) which seem to become oxidized at elevated temperature as evidenced by in situ DRIFTS and in situ XAS. In situ XAS further uncovered that the oxidation of the Pt surface starts from the end of the catalyst bed and the oxidation state oscillates like the catalytic activity.  相似文献   

18.
An investigation was conducted of noble metal and metal oxide catalysts deposited on Al2O3. The noble metals Pt, Pd, Rh the metal oxides CuO, SnO2, CoO, Ag2O, In2O3, catalysts were examined. Also investigated were noble metal Pt, Pd, Rh-doped In2O3/Al2O3 catalysts prepared by single sol–gel method. Both were studied for their capability to reduce NO by propene under lean conditions. In order to improve the catalytic activity and the temperature window, the intermediate addition propene between a Pt/Al2O3 oxidation and metal oxide combined catalyst system was also studied. Pt/Al2O3 and In2O3/Al2O3 combined catalyst showed high NO reduction activity in a wider temperature window, and more than 60% NO conversion was observed in the temperature range of 300–550 °C.  相似文献   

19.
Methanol steam reforming (MSR) and preferential CO oxidation (PROX) were studied with the view of improving the generation of H2-rich gases. In MSR, conventional catalysts of methanol synthesis were tested, various Cu-based catalysts were prepared and studied. A theoretic kinetic model (based on the reaction mechanism established using independent methods [1]) is developed and checked out. PROX was studied over various Ru/Al2O3 catalysts using a flow “quasi-adiabatic” reactor. On-line recording of gas temperature in the catalyst bed and CO residual concentration at varied reaction conditions allowed to observe ignition and extinction of the catalyst surface and the transition states of the process. It is shown that in the ignition mode a sharp decrease in CO residual concentration can be achieved. The combination of proposed catalyst and the control of the macrokinetic regime of PROX allows high degree of CO removal from gaseous mixtures produced by MSR. Residual CO content in a H2-rich gaseous mixture can be lowered to < 15 ppm at GHSV∼100 m3/(kg cat)/h and O2/CO ratio of 1. Obtained data show the possibility of designing a high-throughput set-up for generation of H2-rich gases from methanol with one-step cleaning from the CO impurity.  相似文献   

20.
Oxidation activity and stability under reaction was investigated for a series of mixed oxide catalysts, doped or not by a precious metal (Pd, Pt). The reaction feedstock, containing CO, H2, CH4, CO2 and H2O, simulated gases issued from H2 production processes for fuel cells. Contrarily to conventional noble metal catalysts, mixed oxide samples present generally good stability under reaction at high temperature. The activities measured for the perovskite and hexaaluminate catalysts, are however largely lower than that of the reference Pd/Al2O3 catalyst. High activities were obtained after impregnation of 1.1 wt.% Pd or 0.8 wt.% Pt on the hexaaluminates samples. Even if Pd/Al2O3 was found to present a high activity, this sample suffered from drastic deactivation at 700 °C. Better stability were obtained on perovskite. Furthermore, doping hexaaluminate by Pt led to samples with good activities and high stability. Even if better activities were obtained by doping the hexaaluminate samples by Pd, the Pd/BaAl12O19 strongly deactivated, as it was previously observed for the reference catalyst. Interestingly, this Pd deactivation was not observed when Pd was impregnated on the Mn substituted hexaaluminate, leading to a stable and active catalyst. This suggests that it is possible to stabilize the palladium in its oxidized form at high temperature (700 °C) on the surface of some supports.  相似文献   

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