4.6 Article

Effects of calcination and activation conditions on ordered mesoporous carbon supported iron catalysts for production of lower olefins from synthesis gas

Journal

CATALYSIS SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 6, Issue 24, Pages 8464-8473

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c6cy01251e

Keywords

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Funding

  1. PostDoc program of the German Academic Exchange Service (Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst, DAAD)
  2. European Research Council, EU FP7 ERC [338846]

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Lower C-2-C-4 olefins are important commodity chemicals usually produced by steam cracking of naphtha or fluid catalytic cracking of vacuum gas oil. The Fischer-Tropsch synthesis of lower olefins (FTO) with iron-based catalysts uses synthesis gas as an alternative feedstock. Nanostructured carbon materials are widely applied as supports for the iron nanoparticles due to their weak interaction with the metal species, facilitating the formation of catalytically active iron carbide. Numerous synthetic approaches towards carbon-supported FTO catalysts with various structures and properties have been published in recent years but structure-performance relationships remain poorly understood. We apply ordered mesoporous carbon (CMK-3) as a support material with well-defined pore structure to investigate the relationships between calcination/activation conditions and catalytic properties. After loading of iron and sodium/sulfur as the promoters, the structures and properties of the FTO catalysts are varied by using different calcination (3001000 degrees C) and activation (350 or 450 degrees C) temperatures followed by FTO testing at 1 bar, 350 degrees C, H-2/CO = 1. Carbothermal reduction of iron oxides by the support material occurs at calcination temperatures of 800 or 1000 degrees C, leading to a higher ratio of catalytically active iron(carbide) species but the catalytic activity remains low due to particle growth and blocking of the catalytically active sites with dense graphite layers. For the samples calcined at 300 and 500 degrees C, the formation of non-blocked iron carbide can be enhanced by activation at higher temperatures, leading to higher catalytic activity. Olefin selectivities of similar to 60%(C) in the formed hydrocarbons with methane of similar to 10%(C) are achieved for all catalysts under FTO conditions at low CO conversion. The influence of the calcination temperature is further investigated under industrially relevant FTO conditions. Promoted CMK-3-supported catalysts obtained at low calcination temperatures of 300-500 degrees C show stable operation for 140 h of time on stream at 10 bar, 340 degrees C, H-2/CO = 2.

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