Title: The Effect of Co-feeding Methyl Acetate on the H-ZSM5 Catalysed Methanol-to-Hydrocarbons Reaction

Authors (6): A. Zachariou, A. P. Hawkins, P. Collier, R. F. Howe, S. F. Parker, D. Lennon

Themes: Design (2020)

DOI: 10.1007/s11244-020-01258-3

Citations: 10

Pub type: article-journal

Publisher: Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Issue: 3-4

License: [{"URL"=>"https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0", "start"=>{"date-parts"=>[[2020, 4, 3]], "date-time"=>"2020-04-03T00:00:00Z", "timestamp"=>1585872000000}, "delay-in-days"=>0, "content-version"=>"tdm"}, {"URL"=>"https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0", "start"=>{"date-parts"=>[[2020, 4, 3]], "date-time"=>"2020-04-03T00:00:00Z", "timestamp"=>1585872000000}, "delay-in-days"=>0, "content-version"=>"vor"}]

Publication date(s): 2020/07/03 (online)

Pages: 370-377

Volume: 63 Issue: 3-4

Journal: Topics in Catalysis

Link: [{"URL"=>"http://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/s11244-020-01258-3.pdf", "content-type"=>"application/pdf", "content-version"=>"vor", "intended-application"=>"text-mining"}, {"URL"=>"http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11244-020-01258-3/fulltext.html", "content-type"=>"text/html", "content-version"=>"vor", "intended-application"=>"text-mining"}, {"URL"=>"http://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/s11244-020-01258-3.pdf", "content-type"=>"application/pdf", "content-version"=>"vor", "intended-application"=>"similarity-checking"}]

URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11244-020-01258-3

The reactivity of methanol and methyl acetate mixtures over a HZSM-5 catalyst is studied over a period of 6 h at 350 °C, with small molecular weight olefins and aromatic compounds observed as reaction products. Post-reaction analysis of the catalyst shows the coke content to increase with methyl acetate content. Vibrational spectra (DRIFTS and inelastic neutron scattering, INS) indicate the major hydrocarbon species present in the coked catalysts to be methylated aromatic molecules, with INS spectra indicating a greater degree of methylation in the catalysts used with higher methyl acetate content. The greater extent of deactivation at higher methyl acetate concentrations is tentatively attributed to a diminishment of water in the zeolite cavity, which would otherwise facilitate re-generation of the active sites.

Name Description Publised
INS study of the first carbon-carbon bond formation stage in the methanol-to-hydrocarbons reaction. Methanol-to-Hydrocarbons is an industrially relevant reaction. The gener... 2021


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