Wasteomics ⇒ a workflow to analyze complex reaction environments, waste, and realistic feeds conversions



Problem statement

In most heterogeneous catalytic processes, the reactive environment contains a mixture of reactants, intermediates, and products, and some adsorbed-trapped on the catalytic surface and elsewhere. Thus, most reacting environments in catalysis are complex, involve several phases (multiphase), and comprise unstable species or are challenging to analyze. To make things worse, some of these species have (auto-)catalytic or deactivating nature on the kinetics of the surrounding ones.

A typical practice in catalysis is using model molecules or surrogates to deepen into the mechanistic pathways, microkinetics, spectroscopy, etc. Conversely, analytical techniques keep evolving, becoming more precise but always targeting a specific fraction or type of species. That is to say, there is only one technique that solves all.

We aim to bridge the fundamental research performed in our group and outside using model molecules with a powerful analytical multi-technique approach to analyze the entire reaction media. The -omics fields inspire us to reflect on the collective characterization and quantification of pools of molecules that translate into the structure, function, and dynamics involved. We apply our approach to hydrocarbon transformations and green-sustainable feedstock (i.e., waste plastics, sewage sludge, biomass, algae, and seaweed). We develop multi-technique analytical protocols for the complete chemical molecular-level description of complex mixtures.

Goals

  • Analytical workflow ⇒ multi-analytical technique integration
  • Wasteometrics I ⇒ quantitative- and molecular-level analysis
  • Wasteometrics II ⇒ data mining and processing
  • Wasteomics ⇒ reaction networks and kinetic modeling

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Related Publications

Deactivating Species in the Transformation of Crude Bio-Oil with Methanol into Hydrocarbons on a HZSM-5 Catalyst

by Valle, Castaño, Olazar, Bilbao, Gayubo
J. Catal. Year: 2012

Abstract

A study has been carried out by using different techniques (TPO, FTIR, Raman, 13C NMR, GC/MS of the coke dissolved in CH2Cl2) on the nature of the coke deposited on a HZSM-5 catalyst modified with Ni in the transformation of the crude bio-oil obtained by flash pyrolysis of lignocellulosic biomass (pine sawdust) into hydrocarbons. The reaction system has two steps in-line. In the first one, the components of crude bio-oil derived from the pyrolysis of biomass lignin are polymerized at 400 °C. In the second one, the remaining volatile oxygenates are transformed into hydrocarbons in a fluidized bed catalytic reactor at 450 °C. The reaction has been carried out with different bio-oil/methanol mass ratios in the feed (from 100/0 to 0/100). Co-feeding methanol significantly attenuates coke deposition, and the nature of the coke components varies according to the bio-oil/methanol ratio in the feed. When bio-oil is co-fed, the coke deposited on the catalyst has a significant content of oxygenates and oxo-aromatics and consists of two fractions, identified by temperature programmed oxidation, corresponding to external and internal coke in the zeolite crystals. The fraction of external coke is soluble in CH2Cl2, with a high content of oxygenates and oxo-aromatics, and is generated by polymerization of products derived from biomass lignin pyrolysis activated by the zeolite acid sites. The fraction of coke retained within the zeolite crystals is partially insoluble and is formed by several routes: from the intermediates in the transformation of both methanol and bio-oil oxygenates into hydrocarbons; by evolution of the other coke fraction; from the hydrocarbons (with high aromatics content) in the reaction medium.

Keywords

O2H FCC W2C ANW