Reaction Mechanism and Deactivation Modes of Heterogeneous Catalytic Systems
β Scribed by K. KUMBILIEVA; L. PETROV; Y. ALHAMED; A. ALZAHRANI
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2011
- Weight
- 377 KB
- Volume
- 32
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1872-2067
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Solving the problem of catalyst deactivation is essential in process design. To do this, various aspects of the kinetics of processes with catalyst deactivation, and their different mechanisms, are discussed. Catalyst deactivation often cannot be avoided, but more knowledge on its mechanism can help to find kinetic means to reduce its harmful consequences. When deactivation is caused by coke, the generation of coke precursors is the determining step in the deactivation kinetics. Different types of deactivation were distinguished that lead to different evolution of the process. The phenomenon of non-uniform coking can be linked to catalyst surface non-uniformity. For the class of catalysts with more than one type of active sites, an explanation was suggested for the observed trends in the deactivation modes. For catalytic processes using catalyst particles of industrial size, the influence of intraparticle diffusion resistance is important. The analysis showed that for a number of processes, the decrease of the reaction rate due to deactivation is less under diffusion control. For certain reaction mechanisms, there exist operation conditions where the rate of the process under diffusion control exceeds the rate in the kinetic control regime. A significant problem is the change of selectivity in the course of catalyst deactivation. The selectivity may either decrease or increase, and depends on the reaction mechanism during deactivation. The changes are larger when there is no diffusion resistance. The intentional poisoning of catalysts and its influence on catalyst activity and selectivity for the process of ethylene oxide production was discussed.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract A general expression for the timeβdependence of the activity of a catalyst pellet affected by both chemical deactivation and diffusion is developed. Specific results are given for both uniform and poreβmouth poisoning, with parallel and series poisoning mechanisms. Comparisons show a sa
With multichannel detection, in situ Surface-Enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) is demonstrated to provide a viable and valuable means of examining adsorption and reactions at transition metal surfaces in gas phase environments. especially at high pressures and elevated temperatures of relevance to