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Fischer-Tropsch catalyst design

Girardon J.-S., Constant-Griboval A., Gengembre L., Chemavskii P.A., and Khodakov A.Y. 2005. Optimisation of the pretreatment procedure in the design of cobalt silica supported Fischer Tropsch catalysts. Paper presented at the Gas-Fuel 05 Conference, Bruges, Belgium. [Pg.15]

Li, S., Krishnamoorthy, S., Li, A., Meitzner, G.D., and Iglesia, E. 2002. Promoted iron-based catalysts for the Fischer-Tropsch synthesis Design, synthesis, site densities, and catalytic properties. J. Catal. 206 202-17. [Pg.146]

In many respects the SMDS process (Figure 18.8) precipitated a change in the Fischer-Tropsch community with respect to the preferred catalyst for Fischer-Tropsch synthesis and the approach to product workup. It is therefore instructive to understand why Shell moved away from iron-based Fischer-Tropsch catalysts (and as a consequence also high-temperature synthesis) and opted for a Co-LTFT process with an uncomplicated refinery design that does not produce... [Pg.354]

Although the mechanistic details of this system are not yet clear, it certainly represents a significant step toward the design of Fischer-Tropsch catalysts capable of functioning under mild conditions of temperature and pressure. Furthermore, it lends some credence (vide infra) to the suggestion that multimetal systems may be more useful than monometallic systems for the reductive polymerization of CO. [Pg.73]

The electron microscope offers a unique approach for measuring individual nano-sized volumes which may be catalytically active as opposed to the averaging method employed by spectroscopic techniques. It is just this ability of being able to observe and measure directly small crystallites or nano-volumes of a catalyst support that sets the microscope apart from other analyses. There have been many studies reported in the literature over the past fifteen years which emphasize the use of analytical and transmission electron microscopy in the characterization of catalysts. Reviews (1-5) of these studies emphasize the relationship between the structure of the site and catalytic activity and selectivity. Most commercial catalysts do not readily permit such clear distinction of physical properties with performance. The importance of establishing the proximity of elements, elemental distribution and component particle size is often overlooked as vital information in the design and evaluation of catalysts. For example, this interactive approach was successfully used in the development of a Fischer-Tropsch catalyst (6). Although some measurements on commercial catalysts can be made routinely with a STEM, there are complex catalysts which require... [Pg.345]

The second reaction is called the Fischer-Tropsch synthesis of hydrocarbons. Depending on the conditions and catalysts, a wide range of hydrocarbons from very light materials up to heavy waxes can be produced. Catalysts for the Fischer-Tropsch reaction iaclude iron, cobalt, nickel, and mthenium. Reaction temperatures range from about 150 to 350°C reaction pressures range from 0.1 to tens of MPa (1 to several hundred atm) (77). The Fischer-Tropsch process was developed iadustriaHy under the designation of the Synthol process by the M. W. Kellogg Co. from 1940 to 1960 (83). [Pg.416]

The principal advance ia technology for SASOL I relative to the German Fischer-Tropsch plants was the development of a fluidized-bed reactor/regenerator system designed by M. W. Kellogg for the synthesis reaction. The reactor consists of an entrained-flow reactor ia series with a fluidized-bed regenerator (Fig. 14). Each fluidized-bed reactor processes 80,000 m /h of feed at a temperature of 320 to 330°C and 2.2 MPa (22 atm), and produces approximately 300 m (2000 barrels) per day of Hquid hydrocarbon product with a catalyst circulation rate of over 6000 t/h (49). [Pg.291]

Fluidized Catalyst Reactor. Two systems have been proposed, based on large scale operation of the Fischer-Tropsch process (to produce liquid hydrocarbons) at SASOL and at Carthage Hydrocol. The SASOL system was designed by M. W. Kellogg and has been operating for about 20 years (57, 58, 59, 60). [Pg.34]

Iglesia, E., Reyes, S. C., Madon, R. J., and Soled, S. L. 1993. Selectivity control and catalyst design in the Fischer-Tropsch synthesis Sites, pellets, and reactors. Adv. Catal. 39 221-302. [Pg.118]

Iglesia, E. 1997. Design, synthesis, and use of cobalt-based Fischer-Tropsch synthesis catalysts. Appl. Catal. 161 59-78. [Pg.163]

The most difficult problem to solve in the design of a Fischer-Tropsch reactor is its very high exothermicity combined with a high sensitivity of product selectivity to temperature. On an industrial scale, multitubular and bubble column reactors have been widely accepted for this highly exothermic reaction.6 In case of a fixed bed reactor, it is desirable that the catalyst particles are in the millimeter size range to avoid excessive pressure drops. During Fischer-Tropsch synthesis the catalyst pores are filled with liquid FT products (mainly waxes) that may result in a fundamental decrease of the reaction rate caused by pore diffusion processes. Post et al. showed that for catalyst particle diameters in excess of only about 1 mm, the catalyst activity is seriously limited by intraparticle diffusion in both iron and cobalt catalysts.1... [Pg.216]

Diesel production involved a straightforward design. The olefinic distillate from olefin oligomerization was combined with the straight-run HTFT distillate and hydrotreated. The hydrotreated Fischer-Tropsch-derived distillate was blended with the distillate fraction from the natural gas liquids to produce diesel fuel. In 2003 another hydrotreater (noble metal catalyst) was added to the refinery to convert part of the hydrotreated HTFT distillate into low aromatic distillate to serve a niche market.56... [Pg.353]

Summarizing, there are still many scientific challenges and major opportunities for the catalysis community in the field of cobalt-based Fischer-Tropsch synthesis to design improved or totally new catalyst systems. However, such improvements require a profound knowledge of the promoted catalyst material. In this respect, detailed physicochemical insights in the cobalt-support, cobalt-promoter and support-support interfacial chemistry are of paramount importance. Advanced synthesis methods and characterization tools giving structural and electronic information of both the cobalt and the support element under reaction conditions should be developed to achieve this goal. [Pg.42]

Table V shows the salient features of several Fischer-Tropsch processes. Two of these—the powdered catalyst-oil slurry and the granular catalyst-hot gas recycle—have not been developed to a satisfactory level of operability. They are included to indicate the progress that has been made in process development. Such progress has been quite marked in increase of space-time yield (kilograms of C3+ per cubic meter of reaction space per hour) and concomitant simplification of reactor design. The increase in specific yield (grams of C3+ per cubic meter of inert-free synthesis gas) has been less striking, as only one operable process—the granular catalyst-internally cooled (by oil circulation) process—has exceeded the best specific yield of the Ruhrchemie cobalt catalyst, end-gas recycle process. The importance of a high specific yield when coal is used as raw material for synthesis-gas production is shown by the estimate that 60 to 70% of the total cost of the product is the cost of purified synthesis gas. Table V shows the salient features of several Fischer-Tropsch processes. Two of these—the powdered catalyst-oil slurry and the granular catalyst-hot gas recycle—have not been developed to a satisfactory level of operability. They are included to indicate the progress that has been made in process development. Such progress has been quite marked in increase of space-time yield (kilograms of C3+ per cubic meter of reaction space per hour) and concomitant simplification of reactor design. The increase in specific yield (grams of C3+ per cubic meter of inert-free synthesis gas) has been less striking, as only one operable process—the granular catalyst-internally cooled (by oil circulation) process—has exceeded the best specific yield of the Ruhrchemie cobalt catalyst, end-gas recycle process. The importance of a high specific yield when coal is used as raw material for synthesis-gas production is shown by the estimate that 60 to 70% of the total cost of the product is the cost of purified synthesis gas.
The methanation reaction is a highly exothermic process (AH = —49.2 kcal/ mol). The high reaction heat does not cause problems in the purification of hydrogen for ammonia synthesis since only low amounts of residual CO is involved. In methanation of synthesis gas, however, specially designed reactors, cooling systems and highly diluted reactants must be applied. In adiabatic operation less than 3% of CO is allowed in the feed.214 Temperature control is also important to prevent carbon deposition and catalyst sintering. The mechanism of methanation is believed to follow the same pathway as that of Fischer-Tropsch synthesis. [Pg.108]


See other pages where Fischer-Tropsch catalyst design is mentioned: [Pg.81]    [Pg.215]    [Pg.333]    [Pg.356]    [Pg.100]    [Pg.81]    [Pg.329]    [Pg.609]    [Pg.278]    [Pg.129]    [Pg.103]    [Pg.2377]    [Pg.29]    [Pg.29]    [Pg.32]    [Pg.233]    [Pg.287]    [Pg.346]    [Pg.7]    [Pg.213]    [Pg.363]    [Pg.16]    [Pg.27]    [Pg.617]    [Pg.151]    [Pg.7]   


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