Guard Catalysts

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Although catalyst deactivation is inevitable for most processes, how to avoid some direct catalyst premature deactivation as much as possible is of great significance. Catalyst poisoning is an important cause of premature catalyst deactivation. If the feedstock contains impurities such as nickel, vanadium, iron, silicon, arsenic, phosphorus and sodium, even at ppb or even ppm levels in the feedstock, it can have devastating effects on downstream catalysts.

Catalyst Poisoning Mechanism

  • Poisoning is the strong chemisorption of reactants, products, or impurities on other sites that could be used for catalysis, thereby blocking the site of the catalyzed reaction.
  • Taking sulfur poisoning during ethylene hydrogenation as an example, Figure 1 presents a conceptual 2D model of sulfur poisoning on metal surfaces. Strongly adsorbed pairs of sulfur atoms may have multiple effects on metal catalyst performance, including blocking reaction sites, changing neighboring metal atoms, causing surface remodeling, slowing surface diffusion of adsorbed reactants, etc., ultimately leading to premature catalyst deactivation.

Guard CatalystsFigure 1. Conceptual model of sulfur atom poisoning on metal surfaces [1]

Common Catalyst Poisons

The following table lists some common poisons for selected catalysts in important representative reactions.

Catalyst Reaction Poisons
Silica–alumina, zeolites Cracking Organic bases, hydrocarbons, heavy metals
Nickel, platinum, palladium Hydrogenation/dehydrogenation Compounds of S, P, As, Zn, Hg, halides, Pb, NH3, C2H2
Nickel Steam reforming of methane, naphtha H2S, As
Iron, ruthenium Ammonia synthesis O2, H2O, CO, S, C2H2, H2O
Cobalt, iron Fischer–Tropsch synthesis H2S, COS, As, NH3, metal carbonyls
Noble metals on zeolites Hydrocracking NH3, S, Se, Te, P
Silver Ethylene oxidation to ethylene oxide C2H2
Vanadium oxide Oxidation/selective catalytic reduction As/Fe, K, Na from fly ash
Platinum, palladium Oxidation of CO and hydrocarbons Pb, P, Zn, SO2, Fe
Cobalt and molybdenum sulfides Hydrotreating of residuum Asphaltenes, N compounds, Ni, V

Applications

Traps or "getters" are one strategy used to reduce the effects of poisoning, especially sulfur. The researchers investigated the effect of Ce and Yb on the sulfur and water tolerance of Pt/KL aromatization catalysts. The results showed that the addition of Ce and a small amount of Yb significantly suppressed catalyst deactivation in the presence of sulfur. Furthermore, the Ce-promoted Pt/KL catalyst exhibited higher resistance to metal agglomeration and lower coke formation rate.

Guard CatalystsFigure 2. n-Hexane conversion (a) and benzene selectivity (b) vs. time on stream under 2.5 ppm sulfur-containing feed. [2]

References

  1. Morris D. Argyle. (2015). "Heterogeneous Catalyst Deactivation and Regeneration: A Review," Catalysts 5: 145-269.
  2. Siriporn Jongpatiwut. (2002). "Sulfur- and water-tolerance of Pt/KL aromatization catalysts promoted with Ce and Yb," Applied Catalysis A: General 230(1-2): 177-193.
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