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Cracking catalysts structure

A preliminary overall picture of cracking catalyst structures is available in the first three horizontal rows of the composite plot of Fig. 2 and the corresponding data of Table I. Isotherms presented in the lowest row are discussed in Sec. IV. Only the general features of these representative types of cracking catalysts are indicated here, since the detailed plots of individual isotherms will be considered in subsequent sections on sintering. Cracking catalysts of principal interest are represented by three types silica-magnesia silica-alumina and activated clay. [Pg.99]

Chemical Characteristics and Structure of Cracking Catalysts A. G. Oblad, T. H. Milliken, Jr., and G. A. Mills... [Pg.422]

Structure and Sintering Properties of Cracking Catalysts and Related Materials... [Pg.422]

The two limiting cases for the distribution of deactivated catalyst sites are representative of some of the situations that can be encountered in industrial practice. The formation of coke deposits on some relatively inactive cracking catalysts would be expected to occur uniformly throughout the catalyst pore structure. In other situations the coke may deposit as a peripheral shell that thickens with time on-stream. Poisoning by trace constituents of the feed stream often falls in the pore-mouth category. [Pg.464]

Zeolite Y, 2 345t, 5 238-239, 11 678, 679 coke formation on, 5 270 for liquid separation adsorption, 1 674 manufacture, 2 359 structure, 1 675 Zeolite ZSM-5, 11 678 Zeolitic cracking catalysts, 16 835 Zeolitic deposits, 16 813 Zeonex, 10 180 Zeotypes... [Pg.1033]

Kaolinite is the main constituent in china clay used to make porcelain. The layers are largely held together by van der Waals forces. Bentonite is used in cosmetics, as a filler for soaps, and as a plasticizer, and it is used in drilling-muds as a suspension stabilizer. Bentonite and kaolinite clays are used, after treatment with sulfuric acid to create acidic surface sites, as petroleum cracking catalysts. Asbestos also has a layered structure (Section 12.13). [Pg.390]

Faced with the need of obtaining more transportation fuels from a barrel of crude, Ashland developed the Reduced Crude Conversion Process (RCC ). To support this development, a residuum or reduced crude cracking catalyst was developed and over 1,000 tons were produced and employed in commercial operation. The catalyst possessed a large pore volume, dual pore structure, an Ultrastable Y zeolite with an acidic matrix equal in acidity to the acidity of the zeolite, and was partially treated with rare earth to enhance cracking activity and to resist vanadium poisoning. [Pg.308]

Kaolin had little or no cracking activity, and catalyst activity as tested in the laboratory was directly related to silica-alumina gel content. However, the catalyst performed much better in commercial tests than anticipated from laboratory testing. Undoubtedly, this open structure encountered much less severe conditions at the outer surface of the microsphere during regenerations and made internal catalytic surfaces more readily available. This first of the so-called "semisynthetics" was called Nalco 783, and the matrix is still used in many forms some 28 years later.(7,13) Today it is estimated that some 200,000 tons/yr. of kaolin clay is used for cracking catalyst manufacture as reported by Georgia Kaolin Corporation.(24) Figure 10 shows the pore volume distribution for Nalco 783 and two other commercial semisynthetics from that period. [Pg.321]

Sect. 1.2, the surface of an oxide can change its structure quite easily. For example, cracking catalysts exchange oxygen with water almost instantaneously at higher temperatures [74,75] the interaction of water with such catalysts must therefore be a complex process, involving not only an adsorption in molecular form. [Pg.281]

Zeolitic Catalyst—Since the early 1960s. modern cracking catalysts contain a silica-alumina crystalline structured material called zeolite. This zeolite is commonly called a molecular sieve. The admixture of a molecular sieve in with the base clay matrix imparts desirable cracking selectivities. [Pg.1259]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.195 ]




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