Abstract
The hydroconversion of n-heptane was studied on five USY zeolite samples loaded with 1 wt % Pt. Experiments were performed on a continuous fixed-bed stainless steel reactor at 210-310 °C and pressures up to 15 bar. Three in-house samples were subjected to steaming treatment, and the remaining were acid-leached from a commercial source. The study aimed to evaluate the effect of acid leaching, and its subsequent extraframework alumina (EFAL) species removal, on the performance of bifunctional USY zeolite catalysts during n-heptane transformation. Results have shown that steamed samples generate more cracked products at higher conversions when compared to acid-leached ones, more than likely due to a high presence of EFAL species. The degree of steaming played a role in decreasing cracking tendency at higher pressures, which is attributed to pore structure change and decreasing acidity. In addition, steaming resulted in a catalyst sample capable of generating isomers with blended research octane numbers close to those achieved with a robust commercial catalyst. However, poisoning experiments have shown that these two catalysts are highly sensitive to sulfur and require sulfur-free feeds in order to demonstrate their full capacities. © 2011 American Chemical Society.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 9918-9924 |
| Number of pages | 6 |
| Journal | Industrial and Engineering Chemistry Research |
| Volume | 50 |
| Issue number | 17 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 7 Sept 2011 |
Keywords
- Acid leaching
- Bifunctional
- Catalytic properties
- Commercial catalyst
- Cracking tendency
- Dealumination
- Extraframework
- Fixed-bed
- Highly sensitive
- Hydro-isomerization
- Hydroconversion
- n-Heptanes
- Research octane number
- USY zeolites
- Catalyst poisoning
- Hydrocracking
- Isomers
- Leaching
- Platinum
- Silicate minerals
- Stainless steel