4.6 Article

Study on the kinetics of the adsorption and desorption of NH3 on Fe/HBEA zeolite

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 24, Issue 12, Pages 7493-7504

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1cp05378g

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This study characterized a Fe/HBEA zeolite and investigated the kinetics of NH3 adsorption and desorption. The results suggest that NH3 chemisorption leads to weakly and strongly bonded ammonia and ammonium species. A kinetic model was developed, and activation energies for NH3 adsorbate decomposition were determined.
In this work, a Fe/HBEA zeolite (Si/Al: 12.5), representing an effective catalyst for the NH3-SCR process, was physico-chemically characterized and investigated regarding the kinetics of the adsorption and desorption of NH3. The sample was evaluated by N-2 physisorption, Fe-57 Moessbauer and DRUV-Vis spectroscopy, while the kinetics was investigated by temperature-programmed desorption of NH3 (TPD) including different adsorption temperatures. It was shown that the NH3 chemisorption results in weakly and strongly bonded molecular ammonia as well as ammonium species. A kinetic mean field model was developed implying two different types of adsorbates reflecting low (ca. 200 degrees C). Kinetic parameters and surface coverages were obtained from numeric fits of the TPD curves, whereas pre-exponential factors of adsorption were deduced from the kinetic gas theory. As a result, the activation energy for the NHx adsorbate decomposition in the low temperature regime, which is assigned to single and double bonded ammonium species was determined to be 106 kJ mol(-1). The NH3 desorption at higher temperatures referred to an activation energy of 133 kJ mol(-1) predominately related to NH3 coordinated to Lewis acid surface sites and to some extent to stabilized NH4+ species. For validation of the kinetic model, experiments were simulated including NH3 adsorption at different temperatures, subsequent flushing with N-2 and final TPD. Additionally, the consistency of the activation energies with the thermodynamic data was checked using differential scanning calorimetry and a van't Hoff approach.

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