4.7 Article

Partial oxidation of methane on Pt-supported lanthanide doped ceria-zirconia oxides: Effect of the surface/lattice oxygen mobility on catalytic performance

Journal

CATALYSIS TODAY
Volume 169, Issue 1, Pages 125-137

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.cattod.2010.10.098

Keywords

Selective oxidation of CH4; Syngas; Pt; Fluorite-like oxides; Oxygen mobility and reactivity; Oxygen isotope exchange; Transient studies; Mechanism

Funding

  1. Russian Federal Innovation Agency
  2. DFG [SFB558]
  3. [RFBR-CNRS09-03-93112]

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Partial oxidation of methane into syngas at short contact times (5-15 ms) was studied in both steady-state and transient modes at temperatures up to 850 degrees C in realistic feeds (CH4 content up to 20%, CH4/O-2 = 2) with a minimum impact of mass and heat transfer for structured catalysts carrying Pt/Ln(0.3)Ce(0.35)Zr(0.35)O(2-y) (Ln = La, Pr, Gd) as thin layers on walls of corundum channel substrates. Oxygen mobility and reactivity of the active phase were characterized by oxygen isotope heteroexchange, temperature-programmed O-2 desorption and CH4 reduction, isothermal pulse reduction by methane with wide variation of CH4 concentrations and TAP pulse studies. Experimental data point towards a selective oxidation of methane into syngas via a direct route with oxygen-assisted methane activation. This mechanistic feature is related to the strong Pt-support interaction stabilizing highly dispersed oxidic Pt species less active in CH4 and syngas combustion than metallic Pt clusters. Support activates O-2 molecules and supplies active oxygen species to Pt sites. A high rate of oxygen diffusion on the surface and in the bulk of the support and Pt-support oxygen spillover stabilizes Pt in a well dispersed partially oxidized state while preventing coking at high concentrations of CH4 in the feed. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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