Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Catalytic conversion of carbon monoxide and hydrogen

In the early 1920s Badische Arulin- und Soda-Fabrik aimounced the specific catalytic conversion of carbon monoxide and hydrogen at 20—30 MPa (200—300 atm) and 300—400°C to methanol (12,13), a process subsequendy widely industrialized. At the same time Fischer and Tropsch aimounced the Synth in e process (14,15), in which an iron catalyst effects the reaction of carbon monoxide and hydrogen to produce a mixture of alcohols, aldehydes (qv), ketones (qv), and fatty acids at atmospheric pressure. [Pg.79]

Twenty-Five Years of Synthesis of Gasoline by Catalytic Conversion of Carbon Monoxide and Hydrogen Helmut Pichler... [Pg.423]

Pichler, H. 1952. Twenty-five years of synthesis of gasoline by catalytic conversion of carbon monoxide and hydrogen. Adv. Catal. 4 271-341. [Pg.80]

D. Patents of Pier and Winkler (7) (1923) for controlled catalytic conversion of carbon monoxide and hydrogen to methanol exclusively (ZnO-Cr2Os catalyst). [Pg.274]


See other pages where Catalytic conversion of carbon monoxide and hydrogen is mentioned: [Pg.271]   


SEARCH



Carbon and hydrogen

Carbon conversion

Carbon monoxide catalytic

Carbon monoxide catalytic conversion

Carbon monoxide conversion

Carbon monoxide hydrogenation

Carbon monoxide, and hydrogenation

Carbon monoxide/hydrogen

Carbon-13, and hydrogenation

Carbonate conversions

Carbonic catalytic

Carbonization catalytic

Conversion of carbon monoxide and

Hydrogen conversion

Hydrogenation monoxide

Hydrogenation of carbon monoxide

Hydrogenation, catalytic, and

Monoxide-Hydrogen

© 2024 chempedia.info