4.2 Article

Kinetic Modeling of Ethylene Oligomerization to High-Chain-Length Olefins Over Al-SBA-15-Supported Ni Catalyst with LiAlH4 Co-catalyst

Journal

REACTION KINETICS MECHANISMS AND CATALYSIS
Volume 132, Issue 1, Pages 499-511

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11144-021-01939-4

Keywords

Ethylene oligomerization; Semi-batch slurry reactor; Kinetic modeling; Parameter estimation; Heavy olefins

Funding

  1. C1 Gas Refinery Program through the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) - Ministry of Science and ICT, Republic of Korea [NRF-2018M3D3A1A01055765]
  2. Industrial Technological Innovation Program - Ministry of Trade, Industry, and Energy (MOTIE), Republic of Korea [KEIT-20012726]

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The study involved kinetic modeling of ethylene oligomerization using Ni catalyst and co-catalyst, with a focus on the impact of operating conditions on product formation. The results showed that estimating individual kinetic parameters and grouped mass transfer coefficients led to the lowest errors. Operating temperature and feed flow rate were found to be critical factors affecting product yield, guiding towards optimal operation conditions.
Kinetic modeling of ethylene oligomerization was performed; an Al-SBA-15-supported Ni catalyst and LiAlH4 co-catalyst were used to produce high-chain-length olefins in a one-pot reaction. A semi-batch slurry reactor produced kinetic data at different feed flow rates and temperatures. Grouping of the kinetic and mass transfer coefficients concerning the products was introduced to estimate undetermined parameters with limited experimental data. Among the four combinatorial cases, the estimation of individual kinetic parameters and grouped mass transfer coefficients showed the lowest errors and Akaike's information criteria. The activation energies for the formation of hexene and octene were determined to be approximately 15 and 45 kJ/mol, respectively, confirming reported values of 23.1-64.1 kJ/mol. The model showed that the formation of short-chain-length olefins accounted for the rate-determining steps, and the evaluation for the effects of operating conditions guided optimal operation; high temperature and feed flow rate maximized heavy species production, and the flow rate should be optimized to maximize light olefin production.

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