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Détail de l'auteur
Auteur Yiyang Yang
Documents disponibles écrits par cet auteur
Affiner la rechercheCatalyst deactivation of Rh-coated foam monolith for catalytic partial oxidation of methane / Shi Ding in Industrial & engineering chemistry research, Vol. 48 N° 6 (Mars 2009)
[article]
in Industrial & engineering chemistry research > Vol. 48 N° 6 (Mars 2009) . - pp. 2878–2885
Titre : Catalyst deactivation of Rh-coated foam monolith for catalytic partial oxidation of methane Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Shi Ding, Auteur ; Yiyang Yang, Auteur ; Yong Jin, Auteur Année de publication : 2009 Article en page(s) : pp. 2878–2885 Note générale : Chemical engineering Langues : Anglais (eng) Mots-clés : Rhodium-coated foam monolith Catalyst deactivation Methane oxidation Résumé : The catalyst deactivation behavior of rhodium-coated foam monolith was systematically investigated in order to understand the means to improve the durability of the rhodium catalyst applied for catalytic partial oxidation of methane (CPOM). The overall CPOM reactions on the foam structured catalyst have been acknowledged to take place first in an oxidation zone and thereafter in a reforming zone. Severe metal sintering near the entrance of the structured catalyst (i.e., in the oxidation zone) was identified to be responsible for the observed deactivation of rhodium catalyst in the course of a 1000 h time-on-stream test under quasi-adiabatic conditions. Further analyses on the deactivation process indicated that the reaction pathway in the oxidation zone near the entrance can be summarized by a mixed mechanism, that is, two oxidation reactions and one reforming reaction, where H2 is the indirect product of steam reforming of the unreacted CH4. Detailed studies on the dependence of the catalyst stability on the operating conditions and the catalyst designs showed that adding an inert gas to the reactant gases, increasing the metal loading and/or decreasing the pore size of the foam-structured catalyst in the oxidation zone, can improve the catalyst stability, while the catalyst modifications in the reforming zone has little effect on the overall behavior of the catalyst stability. En ligne : http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/ie801500n [article] Catalyst deactivation of Rh-coated foam monolith for catalytic partial oxidation of methane [texte imprimé] / Shi Ding, Auteur ; Yiyang Yang, Auteur ; Yong Jin, Auteur . - 2009 . - pp. 2878–2885.
Chemical engineering
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Industrial & engineering chemistry research > Vol. 48 N° 6 (Mars 2009) . - pp. 2878–2885
Mots-clés : Rhodium-coated foam monolith Catalyst deactivation Methane oxidation Résumé : The catalyst deactivation behavior of rhodium-coated foam monolith was systematically investigated in order to understand the means to improve the durability of the rhodium catalyst applied for catalytic partial oxidation of methane (CPOM). The overall CPOM reactions on the foam structured catalyst have been acknowledged to take place first in an oxidation zone and thereafter in a reforming zone. Severe metal sintering near the entrance of the structured catalyst (i.e., in the oxidation zone) was identified to be responsible for the observed deactivation of rhodium catalyst in the course of a 1000 h time-on-stream test under quasi-adiabatic conditions. Further analyses on the deactivation process indicated that the reaction pathway in the oxidation zone near the entrance can be summarized by a mixed mechanism, that is, two oxidation reactions and one reforming reaction, where H2 is the indirect product of steam reforming of the unreacted CH4. Detailed studies on the dependence of the catalyst stability on the operating conditions and the catalyst designs showed that adding an inert gas to the reactant gases, increasing the metal loading and/or decreasing the pore size of the foam-structured catalyst in the oxidation zone, can improve the catalyst stability, while the catalyst modifications in the reforming zone has little effect on the overall behavior of the catalyst stability. En ligne : http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/ie801500n