(674f) Improved Low-Temperature Catalytic Combustion of Methane over Pd in High-Silica Chabazite Zeolites | AIChE

(674f) Improved Low-Temperature Catalytic Combustion of Methane over Pd in High-Silica Chabazite Zeolites

Authors 

Liu, J. - Presenter, Syracuse University
Mon, T., University at Buffalo
Schuarca, R., Syracuse University
Bond, J., Syracuse University
Kyriakidou, E., SUNY at Buffalo
Cybulskis, V., Syracuse University
Catalytic combustion of CH4 to CO2 can reduce the environmental impact of CH4­ emissions from point sources in the fossil energy sector by more than 96% while generating less NO­x compared to thermal combustion processes.1 Pd/Al2O3 catalysts can oxidize CH4 under stoichiometric (𝜆 = 1) conditions, but under CH4-lean (𝜆 > 1), low temperature conditions, particularly in the presence of H2O, it cannot achieve sufficient CH4 conversion and remain stable. Pd-containing high-silica zeolites, such as Pd/SSZ-13 (CHA), outperform Pd/Al2O3 for complete CH4 oxidation in the presence of H2O and remain hydrothermally stable due to their hydrophobicity and superior durability.2

CHA zeolites (Si/Al = 15-137) were synthesized in both hydroxide (OH) and fluoride (F) media,3 ion-exchanged to 1 wt.% Pd, and then evaluated for CH4 oxidation activity before and after simulated aging for 1 h at 650 ºC under wet-lean conditions (0.15% CH4, 5% O2, 5% H2O, bal. Ar). A comparison of temperatures required to achieve 50% and 90% CH4 conversion (i.e., T50, T90) revealed that Pd/CHA (Si/Al > 33) demonstrates improved light-off activity and stability under dry and wet conditions compared to Pd/Al2O3. Decreasing T50 and T90 temperatures for Pd/CHA with increasing Si/Al molar ratios and results for Pd/CHA‑OH (137) and Pd/CHA-F (80) of similar Si/Al ratio suggest that more hydrophobic zeolites improve low temperature performance and hydrothermal stability. Steady state CH4 oxidation rates measured on 1 wt.% Pd/CHA-F-80 at 250 ºC (0.15 % CH4, 5% O2, N2 bal.) were ~3.5 × 10-7 moles CH4 (gcat)-1 s-1, or ~2× greater than Pd/Al2O3 under similar conditions (Figure 1). Higher CH4 oxidation rates, higher apparent CH4 orders (~1), and lower activation barriers for Pd/CHA-F (Si/Al > 33) suggest that the nature of the active Pd is different on these hydrophobic zeolites with sites that can more easily activate CH4 compared to Pd/Al2O3.