4.8 Article

Preparation and characterization of lanthanum-promoted cobalt-copper catalysts for the conversion of syngas to higher oxygenates: Formation of cobalt carbide

Journal

JOURNAL OF CATALYSIS
Volume 339, Issue -, Pages 1-8

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.jcat.2016.03.030

Keywords

Higher alcohol synthesis; Syngas; Cobalt; Copper; Cobalt carbide; Modified Fischer-Tropsch catalysts; Turnover frequency

Funding

  1. Center for Atomic Level Catalyst Design, an Energy Frontier Research Center - US Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences [DE-SC0001058]

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A series of La-promoted cobalt-copper catalysts with various Co:Cu ratios have been used to study the conversion of syngas to oxygenates and hydrocarbons. In particular, the effect of the Co:Cu composition on the selectivity to oxygenates versus hydrocarbons has been examined. Three bulk catalysts were synthesized by coprecipitation, reduced in H-2/He flow, and then cobalt carbide was formed during CO hydrogenation. The composition of the catalysts was as follows: Cu:Co = 12:9, 7:13, and 0:21 (cobalt only). CO hydrogenation tests were performed at differential conversions and 30 bar, H-2/CO = 211 and 250 degrees C. The C-1 selectivity (methane + methanol + CO2) was similar to 64% for the two catalysts containing Co and Cu, and slightly less for the Co-only catalyst (52%). These products are formed by three mechanisms: (1) CH4: hydrogenation of dissociatively adsorbed CO at metallic cobalt sites, (2) CH3OH: hydrogenation of associatively adsorbed CO at copper sites, and (3) CO2: water gas shift, also at the copper sites. C2+ alcohol selectivity for the two Cu-containing catalysts is greater than for the Co-only catalyst, while the Co-only catalyst has the highest selectivity to acetaldehyde. The formation of C2+ oxygenates is consistent with the CO insertion mechanism, in which associatively adsorbed CO is inserted into the CH species and forms the first C-C bond, producing a CHxCO intermediate that can be hydrogenated into ethanol or acetaldehyde. (C) 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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