CH₄ decompostion kinetics on supported Co and Ni catalysts

Methane activation is important in a number of reactions that aim to convert natural gas to more valuable products using supported metal catalysts. As a potential alternative to steam reforming and partial oxidation, catalytic decomposition of CH4 may provide H2 without CO contamination for use w...

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Main Author: Zhang, Yi
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/16045
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-160452018-01-05T17:38:06Z CH₄ decompostion kinetics on supported Co and Ni catalysts Zhang, Yi Methane activation is important in a number of reactions that aim to convert natural gas to more valuable products using supported metal catalysts. As a potential alternative to steam reforming and partial oxidation, catalytic decomposition of CH4 may provide H2 without CO contamination for use with PEM fuel cells. However, the mechanism of carbon deposition and catalyst deactivation during CH4 decomposition is complex and not fully understood. The present work is aimed at clarifying some aspects of catalyst deactivation during the decomposition of CH4 at moderate temperatures on low loading Co and Ni catalysts. The experimental observations presented in the present work suggest that catalyst deactivation was a consequence of the competition between the rate of encapsulating carbon formation and the rate of carbon diffusion. Stable activity or catalyst deactivation during CH4 decomposition was observed, depending on which of these two rates was greater. The experimental observations also show that the gas phase composition KM , and catalyst properties such as metal particle size and metal-support interaction have a critical effect on catalyst deactivation: catalyst deactivation was reduced with increasing KM and with increasing metal particle size; catalyst deactivation was increased by a strong metal-support interaction. A general kinetic model of CH4 decomposition on supported metal catalysts has been developed based on experimental observations and the deactivation mechanism described above. The initial rate increase was described by including the rate of carbon nucleation at the tailing face of the metal particle using two methods: Cluster nucleation (Kinetic Model I) and Boltzmann nucleation (Kinetic Model II). The fit of literature data to Kinetic Model I and Kinetic Model II confirmed the presence of carbon nucleation at the tailing face. The observed CH4 decomposition activity profiles on supported Co catalysts with either stable activity or declining activity were well described by the kinetic model. The site density profile along the metal particle was obtained and the effect of metal particle size on the CH4 decomposition activity has been quantified by fitting the observed CH4 decomposition activity profiles to the developed kinetic model. Applied Science, Faculty of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Department of Graduate 2009-12-01T19:22:15Z 2009-12-01T19:22:15Z 2004 2004-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/16045 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. 13668696 bytes application/pdf
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language English
format Others
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description Methane activation is important in a number of reactions that aim to convert natural gas to more valuable products using supported metal catalysts. As a potential alternative to steam reforming and partial oxidation, catalytic decomposition of CH4 may provide H2 without CO contamination for use with PEM fuel cells. However, the mechanism of carbon deposition and catalyst deactivation during CH4 decomposition is complex and not fully understood. The present work is aimed at clarifying some aspects of catalyst deactivation during the decomposition of CH4 at moderate temperatures on low loading Co and Ni catalysts. The experimental observations presented in the present work suggest that catalyst deactivation was a consequence of the competition between the rate of encapsulating carbon formation and the rate of carbon diffusion. Stable activity or catalyst deactivation during CH4 decomposition was observed, depending on which of these two rates was greater. The experimental observations also show that the gas phase composition KM , and catalyst properties such as metal particle size and metal-support interaction have a critical effect on catalyst deactivation: catalyst deactivation was reduced with increasing KM and with increasing metal particle size; catalyst deactivation was increased by a strong metal-support interaction. A general kinetic model of CH4 decomposition on supported metal catalysts has been developed based on experimental observations and the deactivation mechanism described above. The initial rate increase was described by including the rate of carbon nucleation at the tailing face of the metal particle using two methods: Cluster nucleation (Kinetic Model I) and Boltzmann nucleation (Kinetic Model II). The fit of literature data to Kinetic Model I and Kinetic Model II confirmed the presence of carbon nucleation at the tailing face. The observed CH4 decomposition activity profiles on supported Co catalysts with either stable activity or declining activity were well described by the kinetic model. The site density profile along the metal particle was obtained and the effect of metal particle size on the CH4 decomposition activity has been quantified by fitting the observed CH4 decomposition activity profiles to the developed kinetic model. === Applied Science, Faculty of === Chemical and Biological Engineering, Department of === Graduate
author Zhang, Yi
spellingShingle Zhang, Yi
CH₄ decompostion kinetics on supported Co and Ni catalysts
author_facet Zhang, Yi
author_sort Zhang, Yi
title CH₄ decompostion kinetics on supported Co and Ni catalysts
title_short CH₄ decompostion kinetics on supported Co and Ni catalysts
title_full CH₄ decompostion kinetics on supported Co and Ni catalysts
title_fullStr CH₄ decompostion kinetics on supported Co and Ni catalysts
title_full_unstemmed CH₄ decompostion kinetics on supported Co and Ni catalysts
title_sort ch₄ decompostion kinetics on supported co and ni catalysts
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/16045
work_keys_str_mv AT zhangyi ch4decompostionkineticsonsupportedcoandnicatalysts
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