Title of article
Conversion of methanol to hydrocarbons over zeolite H-ZSM-5: On the origin of the olefinic species
Author/Authors
Morten Bj?rgen، نويسنده , , Stian Svelle، نويسنده , , Finn Joensen، نويسنده , , Jesper Nerlov، نويسنده , , Stein Kolboe، نويسنده , , Francesca Bonino، نويسنده , , Luisa Palumbo، نويسنده , , Silvia Bordiga، نويسنده , , Unni Olsbye، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
13
From page
195
To page
207
Abstract
This study examined the reaction mechanism with respect to both catalyst deactivation and product formation in the conversion of methanol to hydrocarbons over zeolite H-ZSM-5. The reactivity of the organics residing in the zeolite voids during the reaction was assessed by transient 12C/13C methanol-switching experiments. In contrast to previously investigated catalysts (H-SAPO-34 and H-beta), hexamethylbenzene is virtually unreactive in H-ZSM-5 and is thus not a relevant reaction intermediate for alkene formation. However, the lower methylbenzenes are reaction intermediates in a hydrocarbon pool-type mechanistic cycle and are responsible for the formation of ethene and propene. An additional reaction cycle not applicable for ethene also must be taken into account. The C3+ alkenes are to formed through rapid alkene methylation and cracking steps to a considerable extent; thus, methanol is converted to hydrocarbons according to two catalytic cycles over H-ZSM-5. Moreover, in contrast to what occurs for large-pore zeolites/zeotypes, molecules larger than hexamethylbenzenes are not built up inside the H-ZSM-5 channels during deactivation. Thus, deactivation is explained by coke formation on the external surface of the zeolite crystallites only. This is a plausible rationale for the superior lifetime properties of H-ZSM-5 in the methanol-to-hydrocarbon reaction.
Keywords
Reducibility , Catalytic pattern , structure sensitivity , CO2 hydrogenation , Cu–ZnO/ZrO2 catalysts , CH3OH synthesis , Physicochemical characterization , dispersion
Journal title
Journal of Catalysis
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Journal of Catalysis
Record number
1225121
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