MTBE synthesis in a novel riser simulator
โ Scribed by Hugo De Lasa; Pierre Fournier; Anand Prakash; Tarek El Solh
- Book ID
- 102805501
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 773 KB
- Volume
- 77
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0008-4034
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
MTBE synthesis, from methanol and iso-butylene, is studied in a novel Riser Simulator using a ZSM-5 catalyst. Conditions selected for the operation of the Riser Simulator unit are as follows: 1-5 catalystheactant ratios, 80 to 16OoC temperatures, 1.09 methanolhso-butylene mol ratio, 25 to 34 kPa methanol partial pressures and 10 to 120 s reaction times. Injection of methanol, with enough time for the methanol to reach adsorption equilibrium, followed by an isobutylene injection is found to be the best operating mode to achieve 100% iso-butylene selectivity toward MTBE with 4 to 6.8% isobutylene conversions. With the gathered experimental data, a reaction rate model based on the Rideal-Eley kinetic model is successfully developed.
On a etudie la synthese du MTBE a partir du methanol et de I'isobutylene, dans un nouveau simulateur de colonne montante utilisant un catalyseur ZSM-5. Les conditions choisies pour le fonctionnement du simulateur sont les suivantes : rapports catalyseur-reactif entre 1 et 5, temperatures entre 80 et 16OoC, rapport molaire methanol-isobutylene de 1,09, pressions partielles du methanol entre 25 et 34 kPa et temps de reaction entre 10 et 120 s. On a trouve que l'injection de methanol, avec un temps suffisant pour que le methanol atteigne I'equilibre d'adsorption, suivie d'une injection de I'isobutylene etait le meilleur mode de fonctionnement p o u ~ realiser une selectivite de I'isobutylene de 100 % vers la MTBE, avec des conversions d'isobutylene de 4 a 6,8 %. A I'aide des donnees experimentales reunies, on a reussi a mettre au point un modele base sur le modele cinetique de Rideal-Eley.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Research on the adsorption phenomena present during fluidized catalytic cracking o f hydrocarbons was carried out utilizing a novel unit developed at CREC-UWO: the Riser Simulator reactor. A series of cracking experiments were carried out using commercial gas oils and cracking catalysts which resemb