Bifunctional Catalysis for the Conversion of Synthesis Gas to Olefins and Aromatics
Publication date
2018-03-07
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Abstract
The conversion of synthesis gas (a mixture of hydrogen and carbon monoxide) to chemicals has attracted significant attention in the past years. Strong emphasis has been on enabling a process that allows the production of short olefins from synthesis gas, which can be derived from coal, biomass or natural gas. Here we introduce bifunctional catalysis to tailor the selectivity towards aromatics next to olefins by combining an iron-based Fischer-Tropsch to olefins catalyst with the acid function of a zeolite. Olefins were formed from synthesis gas on an iron based catalyst and partly converted to aromatics on the acid sited of the zeolite. Surprisingly, this aromatization did not follow the pathway of hydrogen transfer, whereby three paraffin molecules are produced for every aromatic molecule formed, which allowed us to obtain carbon selectivity towards chemicals (sum of lower olefins and aromatics) of ~70-80 % at 1 bar reaction pressure. Increasing the partial pressure of hydrogen led to substantial hydrogenation of olefins towards paraffins.
Keywords
bifunctional catalysis, Fischer–Tropsch to olefins, synthesis gas to chemicals, zeolites, dehydrogenation, Taverne
Citation
Weber, J L, Dugulan, A I, De Jongh, P & De Jong, K P 2018, 'Bifunctional Catalysis for the Conversion of Synthesis Gas to Olefins and Aromatics', ChemCatChem, vol. 10, no. 5, pp. 1107-1112. https://doi.org/10.1002/cctc.201701667