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Ethylene ammoxidation reduction

Chromium zeolites are recognised to possess, at least at the laboratory scale, notable catalytic properties like in ethylene polymerization, oxidation of hydrocarbons, cracking of cumene, disproportionation of n-heptane, and thermolysis of H20 [ 1 ]. Several factors may have an effect on the catalytic activity of the chromium catalysts, such as the oxidation state, the structure (amorphous or crystalline, mono/di-chromate or polychromates, oxides, etc.) and the interaction of the chromium species with the support which depends essentially on the catalysts preparation method. They are ruled principally by several parameters such as the metal loading, the support characteristics, and the nature of the post-treatment (calcination, reduction, etc.). The nature of metal precursor is a parameter which can affect the predominance of chromium species in zeolite. In the case of solid-state exchange, the exchange process initially takes place at the solid- solid interface between the precursor salt and zeolite grains, and the success of the exchange depends on the type of interactions developed [2]. The aim of this work is to study the effect of the chromium precursor on the physicochemical properties of chromium loaded ZSM-5 catalysts and their catalytic performance in ethylene ammoxidation to acetonitrile. [Pg.345]

Supported metal oxides are currently being used in a large number of industrial applications. The oxidation of alkanes is a very interesting field, however, only until recently very little attention has been paid to the oxidation of ethane, the second most abundant paraffin (1). The production of ethylene or acetaldehyde from this feed stock is a challenging option. Vanadium oxide is an important element in the formulation of catalysts for selective cataljdic reactions (e. g. oxidation of o-xylene, 1-3, butadiene, methanol, CO, ammoxidation of hydrocarbons, selective catalytic reduction of NO and the partial oxidation of methane) (2-4). Many of the reactions involving vanadium oxide focus on the selective oxidation of hydrocarbons, and some studies have also examined the oxidation of ethane over vanadium oxide based catalysts (5-7) or reviewed the activity of vanadium oxide for the oxidation of lower alkanes (1). Our work focuses on determining the relevance of the specific oxide support and of the surface vanadia coverage on the nature and activity of the supported vanadia species for the oxidation of ethane. [Pg.295]

Desulfurization of petroleum feedstock (FBR), catalytic cracking (MBR or FI BR), hydrodewaxing (FBR), steam reforming of methane or naphtha (FBR), water-gas shift (CO conversion) reaction (FBR-A), ammonia synthesis (FBR-A), methanol from synthesis gas (FBR), oxidation of sulfur dioxide (FBR-A), isomerization of xylenes (FBR-A), catalytic reforming of naphtha (FBR-A), reduction of nitrobenzene to aniline (FBR), butadiene from n-butanes (FBR-A), ethylbenzene by alkylation of benzene (FBR), dehydrogenation of ethylbenzene to styrene (FBR), methyl ethyl ketone from sec-butyl alcohol (by dehydrogenation) (FBR), formaldehyde from methanol (FBR), disproportionation of toluene (FBR-A), dehydration of ethanol (FBR-A), dimethylaniline from aniline and methanol (FBR), vinyl chloride from acetone (FBR), vinyl acetate from acetylene and acetic acid (FBR), phosgene from carbon monoxide (FBR), dichloroethane by oxichlorination of ethylene (FBR), oxidation of ethylene to ethylene oxide (FBR), oxidation of benzene to maleic anhydride (FBR), oxidation of toluene to benzaldehyde (FBR), phthalic anhydride from o-xylene (FBR), furane from butadiene (FBR), acrylonitrile by ammoxidation of propylene (FI BR)... [Pg.754]

The ammoxidation process ( eq. 8 ) displaced the more expensive acetylene-HCN-based route in the early 1960 s (eq. 20). Other obsolete processes also involve more expensive reagents (e.g. ethylene oxide, eq. 19, and acetaldehyde, eq. 21) and oxidants (e.g. NO, eq. 22). The impact of the introduction of the ammoxidation process in 1960 was an immediate drastic reduction in acrylonitrile price and greatly increased production which made possible many of today s high-volume applications of acrylonitrile (Figure 6A). The production of acrylonitrile, which accounts for 17% of the total U. S. propylene consumption, is used extensively in fibers, plastics and resins (ARS/SA) and rubber industries, with a growing number of miscellaneous applications, including the electro-hydrodimerization process for adiponitrile production (Figure 6B). [Pg.329]

The most effective molybdenum-based oxide catalyst for propane ammoxidation is the Mo-V-Nb-Te-0 catalyst system discovered and patented by Mitsubishi Chemical Corp., Japan, U.S.A. (140). Under single-pass process conditions, acrylonitrile yields of up to 59% are reported, whereas under recycle process feed conditions, the acrylonitrile selectivity is 62% at 25% propane conversion (141). Although the latter results show that the catalyst operates effectively under recycle feed conditions, the catalyst system was originally disclosed for propane ammoxidation under single-pass process conditions. The catalyst was derived from the Mo-V-Nb-0 catalyst developed by Union Carbide Corp. for the selective oxidation of ethane to ethylene and acetic acid (142). The early work by Mitsubishi Chemical Corp. used tellurium as an additive to the Union Carbide catalyst. The yields of acrylonitrile from propane using this catalyst were around 25% with a selectivity to acrylonitrile of 44% (143). The catalyst was also tested for use in a regenerative process mode much like that developed earlier by Monsanto (144) (see above and Fig. 8). Operation under cyclic reduction/reoxidation conditions revealed that the performance of the catalyst improved when it was partially reduced in the reduction cycle of the process. Selectivity to acrylonitrile reached 67%, albeit with propane conversions of less than 10%, since activity in... [Pg.288]


See other pages where Ethylene ammoxidation reduction is mentioned: [Pg.527]    [Pg.348]    [Pg.488]    [Pg.10]    [Pg.2]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.204 ]




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Ethylene ammoxidation

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