Title of article
Transformation of CH4 and liquid fuels into syngas on monolithic catalysts
Author/Authors
Sadykov، نويسنده , , Vladislav and Sobyanin، نويسنده , , Vladimir and Mezentseva، نويسنده , , Natalia and Alikina، نويسنده , , Galina and Vostrikov، نويسنده , , Zakhar and Fedorova، نويسنده , , Yulia and Pelipenko، نويسنده , , Vladimir and Usoltsev، نويسنده , , Vladimir and Tikhov، نويسنده , , Sergey and Salanov، نويسنده , , Aleksei and Bobrova، نويسنده , , Lyudmila and Beloshapkin، نويسنده , , Sergey and Ross، نويسنده , , Julian R.H. and Smorygo، نويسنده , , Oleg and Ulyanitskii، نويسنده , , Vladimir S. Rudnev، نويسنده , , Vladimir، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages
11
From page
1230
To page
1240
Abstract
Active components comprised of fluorite-like Lnx(Ce0.5Zr0.5)1−xO2−y (Ln = La, Pr, Sm) and perovskite-like La0.8Pr0.2Mn0.2Cr0.8O3 mixed oxides and their composites with yttria-doped zirconia (YSZ) promoted by precious metals (Pt, Ru) and/or Ni were supported on several types of heat-conducting substrates (compressed Ni–Al foam, Fecralloy foil or gauze protected by corundum layer, Cr–Al–O microchannel cermets, titanium platelets protected by oxidic layer) as well as on honeycomb corundum monolithic substrate. These structured catalysts were tested in pilot-scale reactors in the reactions of steam reforming of methane, selective oxidation of decane and gasoline and steam/autothermal reforming of biofuels (ethanol, acetone, anisole, sunflower oil). Applied procedures of supporting nanocomposite active components on monolithic/structured substrates did not deteriorate their coking stability in real feeds with a small excess of oxidants, which was reflected in good middle-term (up to 200 h) performance stability promising for further up-scaling and long-term tests. Equilibrium yield of syngas at short contact times was achieved by partial oxidation of decane and gasoline without addition of steam usually required to prevent coking. For the first time possibility of successive transformation of biofuels (ethanol, acetone, anisole, sunflower oil) into syngas at short contact times on monolithic catalysts was demonstrated. This was provided by a proper combination of active component, thermal conducting monolithic substrates and unique evaporation/mixing unit used in this research.
Keywords
Hydrogen and syngas production , Gas and liquid fossil fuels , Steam and autothermal reforming , biofuels , monolithic catalysts
Journal title
Fuel
Serial Year
2010
Journal title
Fuel
Record number
1465616
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