(672d) Kinetic Criteria for Non-Steady State Selectivity Enhancement during Ethane Oxidative Dehydrogenation
AIChE Annual Meeting
2023
2023 AIChE Annual Meeting
Catalysis and Reaction Engineering Division
Emerging Catalytic and Dynamic Reactor Designs
Wednesday, November 8, 2023 - 8:54am to 9:12am
Ethylene is a valuable commodity chemical traditionally produced through catalytic steam cracking of larger hydrocarbons. However, the endothermicity of catalytic steam cracking results in high energy demands to achieve desirable ethylene yields. Selective catalytic oxidative dehydrogenation (ODH) of ethane to ethylene has proven to be an attractive alternative due to its exothermicity and light alkane feedstock. It is speculated that the simultaneous presence of gaseous ethane and oxygen during ODH results in overoxidation to COx, hence decreasing ethylene yields. It is proposed that higher ethylene yields are achievable by promoting reactions between ethane and selective oxygen stored within metal oxide catalysts as opposed to unselective gaseous oxygen. To demonstrate this, we compare conventional steady state to concentration forcing (dynamic) operation of ethane ODH. Fig. 1a and b plots carbon selectivities as functions of ethane conversion over 3wt% VOx and 7wt% MoO3 Al2O3 catalysts respectively. Fig.1a shows no significant difference between dynamic and steady state carbon selectivies over the 3wt% VOx Al2O3 catalyst. However, fig. 1b demonstrates higher ethylene selectivities via dynamic operation over a 7wt% MoO3 Al2O3 catalyst. We explain this difference in dynamic performance of supported VOx and MoO3 catalysts based the O2 dependencies of unselective overoxidation reactions. More specifically, improvement via concentration forcing over MoO3 catalysts were rationalized based on higher O2 sensitivities of unselective overoxidation reactions compared to the selective ODH reaction. All reaction rates over the VOx catalyst are independent of oxygen pressure, unlike the MoOx catalyst over which selective and unselective rates are zero and positive fractional order in O2, respectively. Our work presents a method for interpreting dynamic enhancement during ethane ODH from the standpoint of apparent O2 reaction orders of different steps in the overall reaction network, and could be used to provide kinetic criteria for improving oxidation processes through non-steady state operation.