4.6 Article

Toluene Decomposition in Plasma-Catalytic Systems with Nickel Catalysts on CaO-Al2O3 Carrier

Journal

CATALYSTS
Volume 12, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/catal12060635

Keywords

gliding discharge; plasma-catalytic system; tar decomposition; nickel catalyst

Funding

  1. National Center for Research and Development [PBS2/A1/10/2013]

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The decomposition of toluene as a tar imitator in a gas composition similar to the gas after biomass pyrolysis was studied in a plasma-catalytic system. Nickel catalysts, particularly NiO/(CaO-Al2O3), were effective in achieving high conversion rates up to 85% of C7H8 with a stable calorific value.
The decomposition of toluene as a tar imitator in a gas composition similar to the gas after biomass pyrolysis was studied in a plasma-catalytic system. Nickel catalysts and the plasma from gliding arc discharge under atmospheric pressure were used. The effect of the catalyst bed, discharge power, initial toluene, and hydrogen concentration on C7H8 decomposition, calorific value, and unit energy consumption were studied. The gas flow rate was 1000 NL/h, while the inlet gas composition (molar ratio) was CO (0.13), CO2 (0.15), H-2 (0.28-0.38), and N-2 (0.34-0.44). The study was conducted using an initial toluene concentration in the range of 2000-4500 ppm and a discharge power of 1500-2000 W. In plasma-catalytic systems, the following catalysts were compared: NiO/Al2O3, NiO/(CaO-Al2O3), and Ni/(CaO-Al2O3). The decomposition of toluene increased with its initial concentration. An increase in hydrogen concentration resulted in higher activity of the Ni/(CaO-Al2O3) catalysts. The gas composition did not change by more than 10% during the process. Trace amounts of C2 hydrocarbons were observed. The conversion of C7H8 was up to 85% when NiO/(CaO-Al2O3) was used. The products of the toluene decomposition reactions were not adsorbed onto its surface. The calorific value was not changed during the process and was higher than required for turbines and engines in every system studied.

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