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Stable catalyst design for the viable activation of methane to syngas, hydrogen, and chemicals

Problem statement

Methane and light alkanes are surplus species and by-products with relatively poor economic interest. Our goal is to activate C–H σ-bond to produce hydrogen, olefins, carbon monoxide, and carbon nanofibers, following different process strategies such as oxidative coupling (for olefins), CO2 dry reforming (for syngas), cracking or catalytic decomposition (for hydrogen-free of COx and sequestrated carbon nanotubes/nanofibers), cracking/co-cracking with CO or methanol. We work on developing, synthesizing, characterizing, and testing innovative catalysts with a twist of reaction engineering concepts, looking at multi-scale implications.

We delve into the mechanistic insights of a series of in-house synthesized metal-supported heterogeneous catalysts by combining them with dynamic reactors and ab initio calculations. We explore catalysts with promoted lifetime, activity, selectivity, and heat exchange.

We investigate novel reactor designs grounded on forced dynamic (operando) fluidized-bed reactors at high pressures to amplify the kinetic information and hydrogen.

Goals

  • Develop a microkinetic-based modeling framework to analyze the catalyst performance
  • Scale the technical catalyst for its application in demanding exothermic (oxidative coupling of methane using SiC and spray drying) or fluidized-bed (catalytic decomposition of methane) conditions
  • Develop new catalytic concepts based on Ni-alloys (Ni-Fe, -Co, -Zn…)
  • Improve the catalyst structure-function correlations using in-situ, operando, and dynamic techniques and reactors
CHA2023

Related People

Related Publications

Effect of Cofeeding Butane with Methanol on the Deactivation by Coke of a HZSM-5 Zeolite Catalyst

by Aguayo, Castaño, Mier, Gayubo, Olazar, Bilbao
Ind. Eng. Chem. Res. Year: 2011

Abstract

The deactivation by coke of a HZSM-5 zeolite catalyst has been studied in the transformation of methanol into hydrocarbons by cofeeding butane (n-butane). This reaction is of interest as an energy-neutral integrated process that enhances the activity in the cracking reaction and upgrades the paraffins formed as byproducts. The process was carried out in a fixed-bed reactor under the following conditions: temperature, 550 °C; pressure, 1 bar; space time, 2.4 and 4.8 (g of catalyst) h (mol of CH2)−1; time on stream, 5 h; methanol/butane molar ratio, up to 16/1. The coke was characterized using several analytical techniques (TG–TPO, FTIR, Raman, and NMR spectroscopies), and the effects of cofeeding butane on the coke composition and structure were determined. The results in terms of coke content and composition, are explained in terms of the different pathways of methanol and butane transformation.

Keywords

O2H CHA