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1.
The rates of CO and CO/CO2 hydrogenation at 4.2 MPa and 523 K are reported for a series of Cu/SiO2 catalysts containing 2 to 88 wt.% Cu. These catalysts were prepared on a variety of silica sources using several different Cu deposition techniques. In CO/CO2 hydrogenation, the rate of methanol formation is proportional to the exposed Cu surface area of the reduced catalyst precursor, as determined by N2O frontal chromatography. The observed rate, 4.2×10–3 mole CH3OH/Cu site-sec, is within a factor of three of the rates reported by others over Cu/ZnO and Cu/ZnO/Al2O3 catalysts under comparable conditions. These results suggest that the ZnO component is only a moderate promoter in methanol synthesis. Hydrogenation of CO over these catalysts also gives methanol with high selectivity, but the synthesis rate is not proportional to the Cu surface area. This implies that another type of site, either alone or in cooperation with Cu, is involved in the synthesis of methanol from CO.  相似文献   

2.
In situ FT-IR spectroscopy allows the methanol synthesis reaction to be investigated under actual industrial conditions of 503 K and 10 MPa. On Cu/SiO2 catalyst formate species were initially formed which were subsequently hydrogenated to methanol. During the reaction a steady state concentration of formate species persisted on the copper. Additionally, a small quantity of gaseous methane was produced. In contrast, the reaction of CO2 and H2 on ZnO/SiO2 catalyst only resulted in the formation of zinc formate species: no methanol was detected. The interaction of CO2 and H2 with Cu/ZnO/SiO2 catalyst gave formate species on both copper and zinc oxide. Methanol was again formed by the hydrogenation of copper formate species. Steady-state concentrations of copper formate existed under actual industrial reaction conditions, and copper formate is the pivotal intermediate for methanol synthesis. Collation of these results with previous data on copper-based methanol synthesis catalysts allowed the formulation of a reaction mechanism.  相似文献   

3.
FTIR spectra are reported of CO and formic acid adsorption on a series of Cu/ZnO/SiO2 catalysts. Peaks due to linear CO adsorbed on copper diminished in intensity as the loading of ZnO was increased. This behaviour was explained in terms of ZnO island growth on the copper surface. Similarly, reduction of the copper concentration while maintaining a constant ZnO loading also resulted in further attenuation in bands ascribed to CO chemisorbed on copper. Formic acid exposure to a Cu/SiO2 sample produced a formate species displaying a as(COO) mode at 1585 cm–1. Addition of a small quantity of ZnO to the catalyst resulted in substantial promotion of formate growth, which was accompanied by a shift (and broadening) of the as(COO) vibration to 1660–1600 cm–1. Since further ZnO incorporation poisoned formate creation it was concluded that formate species bonded to Cu and Zn sites located at interfacial positions had been formed. The role of such species in methanol synthesis is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
《Catalysis communications》2007,8(11):1829-1833
In situ diffuse reflectance infrared Fourier transform spectroscopy (DRIFTS) was used to study the reaction mechanism of the formate adsorbed species with ethanol to form the ethyl formate on Cu/ZnO catalyst surface in a novel low-temperature methanol synthesis process. The results indicate that the formate adsorbed species were firstly formed by CO/CO2/H2 adsorbed on Cu/ZnO catalyst, followed by rapid reaction with ethanol to form ethyl formate. It was found that the species reacted with formate adsorbed species were ethanol in gas phase rather than adsorbed ethoxy species. The reaction of the adsorbed formate species with ethanol on Cu/ZnO catalyst surface proceeded according to Rideal-type mechanism, not Langmuir–Hinshelwood mechanism.  相似文献   

5.
Zinc oxide catalyses both methanol synthesis and the forward and ‘everse water-gas shift reaction (f- and r- WGSR). Copper also catalyses both reactions, but at lower temperatures than ZnO. Presently the combination of Cu and ZnO stabilized by Al2O3 is the preferred catalyst for methanol synthesis and for the f- and r- WGSR. On Cu, the mechanism of methanol synthesis is by hydrogenation of an adsorbed bidentate formate [1] (the most stable adsorbed species in methanol synthesis), while the f- and r- WGSR proceeds by a redox mechanism. The f-WGSR proceeds by H2O oxidizing the Cu and CO, reducing the adsorbed oxide and the r-WGSR proceeds by CO2 oxidising the Cu and H2, reducing it [2–5]. Here we show that the mechanisms of both reactions are subtly different on ZnO. While methanol is shown to be formed on ZnO through a formate intermediate, it is a monodentate formate species which is the intermediate; the f- and r-WGS reactions also proceed through a formate – a bidentate formate - in sharp contrast to the mechanism on Cu.  相似文献   

6.
A novel gel-network-coprecipitation process has been developed to prepare ultrafine Cu/ZnO/Al2O3 catalysts for methanol synthesis from CO2 hydrogenation. It is demonstrated that the gel-network-coprecipitation method can allow the preparation of the ultrafine Cu/ZnO/Al2O3 catalysts by homogeneous coprecipitation of the metal nitrate salts in the gel network formed by gelatin solution, which makes the metallic copper in the reduced catalyst exist in much smaller crystallite size and exhibit a much higher metallic copper-specific surface area. The effect of the gel concentration of gelatin on the structure, morphology and catalytic properties of the Cu/ZnO/Al2O3 catalysts for methanol synthesis from hydrogenation of carbon dioxide was investigated. The Cu/ZnO/Al2O3 catalysts prepared by the gel-network-coprecipitation method exhibit a high catalytic activity and selectivity in CO2 hydrogenation to methanol.  相似文献   

7.
The effect of ZnO/SiO2 in a physical mixture of Cu/SiO2 and ZnO/SiO2 on methanol synthesis from CO2 and H2 was studied to clarify the role of ZnO in Cu/ZnO-based catalysts. An active Cu/SiO2 was prepared by the following procedure: the Cu/SiO2 and ZnO/SiO2 catalysts with a different SiO2 particle size were mixed and reduced with H2 at 523-723 K, and the Cu/SiO2 was then separated from the mixture using a sieve. The methanol synthesis activity of the Cu/SiO2 catalyst increased with the reduction temperature and was in fairly good agreement with that previously obtained for the physical mixture of Cu/SiO2 and ZnO/SiO2. These results indicated that the active site for methanol synthesis was created on the Cu/SiO2 upon reduction of the physical mixture with H2. It was also found that ZnO itself had no promotional effect on the methanol synthesis activity except for the role of ZnO to create the active site. The active site created on the Cu/SiO2 catalyst was found not to promote the formation of formate from CO2 and H2 on the Cu surface based on in situ FT-IR measurements. A special formate species unstable at 523 K with an OCO asymmetric peak at ~1585 cm-1 was considered to be adsorbed on the active site. This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

8.
The spectroscopy and kinetics of a new low-temperature methanol synthesis method were studied by using in situ DRIFTS on Cu/ZnO catalysts from syngas (CO/CO2/H2) using alcohol promoters. The adsorbed formate species easily reacted with ethanol or 2-propanol at 443 K and atmospheric pressure, and the reaction rate with 2-propanol was faster than that with ethanol. Alkyl formate was easily reduced to form methanol at 443 K and 1.0 MPa, and the hydrogenation rate of 2-propyl formate was found to be faster than that of ethyl formate. 2-Propanol used as promoter exhibited a higher activity than ethanol in the reaction of the low-temperature methanol synthesis.  相似文献   

9.
A new synthesis method of low-temperature methanol proceeded on Cu/ZnO/Al2O3 catalysts from CO/CO2/H2 using 2-butanol as promoters. The Cu/ZnO/Al2O3 catalysts were prepared by co-impregnation of r-Al2O3 with an aqueous solution of copper nitrate and zinc nitrate. The total carbon turnover frequency (TOF), the yield and selectivity of methanol were the highest by using the Cu/ZnO/Al2O3 catalyst with copper loading of 5% and the Zn/Cu molar ratio of 1/1, which precursor were not calcined, and reduced at 493 K. The activity of the catalysts increased due to the presence of the CuO/ZnO phase in the oxidized form of impregnation Cu/ZnO/Al2O3 catalysts. The active sites of the Cu/ZnO/Al2O3 catalyst for methanol synthesis are not only metallic Cu but also special sites such as the Cu–Zn site, i.e. metallic Cu and the Cu–Zn site work cooperatively to catalyze the methanol synthesis reaction.  相似文献   

10.
The effect of ZnO in Cu/ZnO catalysts prepared by the coprecipitation method has been studied using measurements of the surface area of Cu, the specific activity for the methanol synthesis by hydrogenation of CO2, and XRD. Although the Cu surface area increases with increasing ZnO content (0–50 wt%) as is generally known, the specific activity of the Cu/ZnO catalysts with various weight ratios of Cu:ZnO is greater than that of a ZnO-free Cu catalyst. These facts clearly indicate that the role of ZnO in Cu/ZnO catalysts can be ascribed to both increases in the Cu dispersion and the specific activity. The XRD results indicate the formation of a Cu–Zn alloy in the Cu particles of the Cu/ZnO catalysts, leading to the increase in specific activity. It is thus considered that the Cu–Zn surface alloy or a Cu–Zn site is the active site for methanol synthesis in addition to metallic copper atoms that catalyze several hydrogenation steps during the methanol synthesis. Furthermore, the advantage of the coprecipitation method through a precursor of aurichalcite is ascribed to both improvements in the Cu surface area and the specific activity. This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

11.
The interactions of methanol with well-defined Cu films on the oxygen-terminated ZnO(000¯1)-O surface have been studied, mainly using temperature programmed desorption (TPD). The Cu films, which were from submonolayer to multilayer in coverage, had been structurally characterized in previous studies using XPS, LEIS, ARXPS, LEED and work function measurements, and by CO, H2O and formic acid adsorption. On clean Cu films methanol is adsorbed reversibly, desorbing at 200–260 K from atom-thick Cu islands, and at 155 K from multilayer islands preannealed to 550 K. In this respect, the atom-thin islands resemble Cu(110) sites and multilayer islands resemble Cu(111), consistent with behavior of other adsorbates. On oxygen-predosed multilayer films (preannealed to 600 K), methanol reacts to form methoxy species which decompose at 395 K to yield formaldehyde and hydrogen in TPD, also like Cu(111). Multilayer films preannealed to >750 K show a decrease in the peak area for methoxy decomposition which correlates with the loss of Cu area due to severe clustering. Oxygen-predosed Cu islands which are but one Cu atom thick show no clear evidence for a methoxy state in TPD. This suggests that oxygen atoms on such atom-thin Cu islands are poor Brønsted bases relative to Oa on bulk Cu surfaces, consistent with results for adsorbed water. Results on high-area Cu/ZnO catalysts are discussed in the light of these new results.  相似文献   

12.
The problem concerning the active site and the role of ZnO in Cu/ZnO-based methanol synthesis catalysts can be consistently explained based on the literature results by distinguishing CO2 and CO hydrogenations. Although only metallic copper has some activities for methanol synthesis by the hydrogenation of CO2, Cu-Zn alloying in Cu particles is responsible for the major promotional role of ZnO in industrial Cu/ZnO-based catalysts. The morphology effect reported in the literature will probably appear for the system of highly dispersed Cu particles supported on ZnO. As for the hydrogenation of CO, Cu+ species or Cu-O-Zn sites are the active sites for methanol synthesis. The spillover effect of the Cu-ZnO system is not significant compared to the effect of ZnO on the creation of the Cu-O-Zn site.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
低温甲醇合成研究进展   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
日本学者Tsubaki等开创了一种全新的低温甲醇合成反应路径。该路径以含有二氧化碳的合成气为反应原料,使用单一低碳醇(包括甲醇)同时作为催化剂和溶剂,实现了反应原料一氧化碳在低温(443 K)条件下,一步转化率达到70%~100%。原位红外和多种表征手段证明,该反应能够在低温条件下进行,是由于催化剂上吸附的甲酸盐物种可以和多种低碳醇溶剂在低温条件发生酯化反应,生成相对应的甲酸酯。而生成的甲酸酯很容易在低温条件下,铜基催化剂表面,发生加氢反应,生成甲醇和相应的溶剂醇。该种全新的甲醇合成路径克服了常规甲醇合成过程中,甲酸盐必须在高温条件下才能发生加氢反应的关键步骤。同时,还介绍了适用于低温甲醇合成反应的金属Cu/ZnO催化剂制备方法的研究进展。全新的溶胶-凝胶-燃烧法、固相研磨-燃烧法以及甲酸辅助燃烧法直接制备高活性、纳米尺度、高分散的金属Cu/ZnO催化剂,而不需要额外的还原流程。  相似文献   

15.
K. C. Waugh 《Catalysis Letters》2012,142(10):1153-1166
Methanol, like ammonia, is one of the key industrial chemicals produced by heterogeneous catalysis. As with the original ammonia catalyst (Fe/K/Al2O3), so with methanol, the original methanol synthesis catalyst, ZnO, was discovered by Alwin Mittasch. This was translated into an industrial process in which methanol was produced from CO/H2 at 400?°C and 200 atm. Again, as with the ammonia catalyst where the final catalyst which is currently used was achieved only after exhaustive screening of putative “promoters”, so with methanol, exhaustive screening of additives was undertaken to promote the activity of the ZnO. Early successful promoters were Al2O3 and Cr2O3 which enhanced the stability of the ZnO but not its activity. The addition of CuO was found to increase the activity of the ZnO but the catalyst so produced was short lived. Current methanol synthesis catalysts are fundamentally Cu/ZnO/Al2O3, having high CuO contents of?~60?% with ZnO?~?30?% and Al2O3?~?10?%. Far from promoting the activity of the ZnO by incorporation of CuO, the active component of these Cu/ZnO/Al2O3 catalysts is Cu metal with the ZnO simply being involved as the preferred support. Other supports for the Cu metal, e.g. Al2O3, MgO, MnO, Cr2O3, ZrO2 and even SiO2 can also be used. In all of these catalysts the activity scales with the Cu metal area. The original feed has now changed from CO/H2 to CO/CO2/H2 (10:10:80), radiolabelling studies having provided the unlikely discovery that it is the CO2 molecule which is hydrogenated to methanol; the CO molecule acts as a reducing agent. The CO2 is transformed to methanol on the Cu through the intermediacy of an adsorbed formate species. These Cu/ZnO/Al2O3 catalysts now operate at?~230° and between 50 and 100 atm. This important step change in the activity of methanol synthesis has resulted in a significant reduction in the energy required to produce methanol. The “step change” however has been incremental. It has been obtained on the basis of fundamental knowledge provided by a combination of surface science techniques, e.g. LEED, scanning tunnelling microscope, TPD, temperature programmed reaction spectroscopy, combined with catalytic mechanistic studies, including radiolabelling studies and chemisorption studies including reactive chemisorption studies, e.g. N2O reactive frontal chromatography.  相似文献   

16.
One of the ways in which chlorine is thought to poison metal catalysts on oxide supports is by altering their dispersion. The effect of chlorine on Cu/ZnO(0001) model catalysts was studied by vapor‐depositing Cu onto Zn‐terminated ZnO(0001), both with and without preadsorbed Cl2, using XPS, ion scattering spectroscopy (ISS), temperature‐programmed desorption (TPD), work function, and band bending measurements. A disordered, but nearly close‐packed overlayer of Cl adatoms forms at saturation with ∼0.30 Cl adatoms per Zn site. Without Cl, vapor‐deposited Cu grows in two‐dimensional islands that cover ∼33% of the ZnO, after which these islands thicken (i.e., as 3D Cu particles) while the clean ZnO between these Cu islands gets covered with Cu only very slowly. Preadsorbed Cl decreases the fraction of the surface that is covered by Cu islands by a factor of three, so Cl(a) either decreases the number of 2D Cu islands or their critical area before thickening. Both are consistent with weaker binding of Cu to the Cl‐covered surface than to the clean ZnO. The TPD features for formate decomposition after HCOOH adsorption onto Cu/ZnO(0001) were suppressed with preadsorbed Cl, but the CO2 : CO selectivity increased. When Cu was deposited onto Cl‐presaturated ZnO, neither the Zn‐ nor Cu‐formate peaks were observed, showing that Cl covers both the Zn sites and the growing Cu islands, as suggested by ISS also. This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

17.
Mechanism and kinetics of catalytic process for a new low-temperature methanol synthesis on Cu/ZnO catalysts from syngas (CO/CO2/H2) using catalytically active alcohol promoters were investigated by in situ diffuse reflectance infrared Fourier transform spectroscopy (DRIFTS). Two intermediate species, adsorbed formate species and alkyl formate species, were formed in this synthesis process. The adsorbed formate species easily reacted with ethanol or 2-propanol at 443 K and atmospheric pressure, and the reaction rate with 2-propanol was faster than that with ethanol. Alkyl formate was readily reduced to form methanol at 443 K and 1.0 MPa, and the hydrogenation rate of 2-propyl formate was found to be quicker than that of ethyl formate. As a promoter, 2-propanol exhibited a higher activity than ethanol in the reaction of the low-temperature methanol synthesis.  相似文献   

18.
The effect of various modifiers on the performance of a commercial Cu/ZnO/Al2O3 catalyst in methanol synthesis from CO2/H2 and CO/H2 at 523 K and 30 bar has been studied. Several modifiers improved significantly the rate of methanol formation from CO2/H2, while all modified catalysts showed decreased rates for the synthesis from CO/H2 in comparison with the unmodified Cu/ZnO/Al2O3 catalyst. The synthesis rates from both CO2/H2 and CO/H2 correlated with the oxygen coverage of copper surface measured after the reaction by N2O titration.  相似文献   

19.
K.C. Waugh 《Catalysis Letters》1999,58(2-3):163-165
Fujitani and Nakamura recently reported on the effect of ZnO on Cu/ZnO methanol synthesis catalysts (Catal. Lett. 56 (1998) 119). Having measured the methanol synthesis activity of a series of Cu/ZnO catalysts of different Cu/ZnO ratios, they reported a linear relationship between the copper metal area and the methanol yield (implying a fixed value of the copper specific activity) and paradoxically they also reported a volcano-type relationship between the copper specific activity in methanol synthesis and the ZnO content. This paradox is resolved by showing that their Cu/ZnO catalysts fall into two groups: (i) the low-surface-area copper catalysts which have a specific activity of 10 mg CH3OH/m2-Cu h and (ii) the high-surface-area copper catalysts which have specific activity of 14.8 mg CH3OH/m2-Cu h. These different specific activities derive from different surface morphologies of the copper in these catalysts. This revised version was published online in November 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

20.
The catalytic activities of Cu/MOx (MOx = Al2O3, TiO2, and ZnO) catalysts in the gas‐phase hydrogenolysis of glycerol were studied at 180–300 °C under 0.1 MPa of H2. Cu/MOx (MOx = Al2O3, TiO2, and ZnO) catalysts were prepared by the incipient wetness impregnation method. After reduction, CuO species were converted to metallic copper (Cu0). Cu/Al2O3 catalysts with high acidity, high specific surface areas and small metallic copper size favored the formation of 1,2‐propanediol with a maximum selectivity of 87.9 % at complete conversion of glycerol and a low reaction temperature of 180 °C, and favored the formation of ethylene glycol and monohydric alcohols at high reaction temperature of 300 °C. Cu/TiO2 and Cu/ZnO catalysts exhibited high catalytic activity toward the formation of hydroxyacetone with a selectivity of approx. 90 % in a wide range of reaction temperature.  相似文献   

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