4.6 Article

The interactive role of methane beyond a reactant in crude oil upgrading

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COMMUNICATIONS CHEMISTRY
卷 4, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s42004-021-00590-3

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资金

  1. Kara Technologies Inc.
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) through collaborative research and development program [CRDPJ/531607-18]
  3. Alberta Innovates [AI 2552]
  4. Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI)
  5. British Columbia Knowledge Development Fund (BCKDF)
  6. Western Economic Diversification Canada (WD)
  7. Simon Fraser University (SFU)

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The study demonstrates that methane plays a protective role on the catalyst by preventing coke formation inside pores, resulting in better product quality and catalyst stability. The interaction between methane and catalytic active sites is crucial for the unique coke distribution and inhibition of metal deposition.
Crude oil upgrading under a methane environment can lead to improved oil quality as well as catalyst stability, but the role of methane in the reaction remains poorly understood. Here, the authors show that methane prevents coke formation inside the pores of the charged catalyst due to preferable adsorption. Crude oil upgrading under methane has been reported to be an economically and environmentally promising process, while the advantageous effect of methane beyond a reactant is not fully explained. In this work, the catalytic performances, physicochemical properties and regenerability of used catalysts after crude oil upgrading under methane and nitrogen are investigated by n-butylbenzene model compound studies, catalyst characterizations and density functional theory calculations. Comparing to nitrogen, methane exhibits a protective effect on the charged catalyst despite the limited conversion, leading to better product quality and catalyst stability. This protective effect is attributed to the interaction between methane and catalytic active sites, which mainly occurs in the internal pores of the zeolitic catalyst support, resulting in unique coke distribution and inhibition of metal deposition. The interactive role of methane beyond a reactant, which is previously underestimated, is suggested to be critical for better performances of catalysts in relevant reaction processes.

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