2016 AIChE Annual Meeting
(138d) Overlayer Catalyst for Hydrodeoxygenation of Lignin-Derived Model Compounds
Overlayer Catalyst for Hydrodeoxygenation of Lignin-derived Model Compounds
Recently, in an effort to build a more sustainable society, the transformation of lignocelluloseic biomass into chemicals and fuels has attracted extensive attention. The lignin fraction of biomass is a three-dimensional amorphous polymer composed of methoxylated phenylpropane structures, which contains approximately 40% of the possible energy of the biomass. Lignocelluloseic biomass can be converted into crude bio-oil via thermochemical treatment such as pyrolysis or liquefaction. The crude bio-oils are multicomponent mixtures of a large number of oxygenated compounds. However, the high oxygen content of crude bio-oils, usually 20 to 50 wt%, leads to low heating value, poor stability, poor volatility, high viscosity and corrosiveness. Therefore, oxygen removal from bio-oils is required for upgrading bio-oils to fuels suitable for replacement of conventional liquid transportation fuels. Hydrotreating, in which crude bio-oils are reacted with hydrogen in the presence of a catalyst, is the most common method to upgrading bio-oil to hydrocarbons via hydrodeoxygenation (HDO) reaction to remove the undesired oxygen.
Hydrogen chemisorption studies showed that the heat of adsorption for hydrogen decreased for the overlayer catalysts (Ni@Pd, Ni@Pt and Mo@Pt) compared to Pd or Pt catalyst, as expected. For ethylene hydrogenation, Pd or Pt was highly active and the Ni and Mo baseline catalysts showed lower activities. As expected, the deposition of the Pd or Pt overlayer resulted in catalysts (Ni@Pd, Ni@Pt and Mo@Pt) that were more active for ethylene hydrogenation than the pure Ni or Mo parent catalyst. However, when compared to pure Pd or Mo, the overlayer catalysts showed decreased activity. These results agree with computationally predicted d-band shifts from the literature that would cause weaker hydrogen adsorption on the metal surface, decreased surface coverage, and ultimately reduced activity for ethylene hydrogenation when compared to Pd or Pt metal alone. Thus, the chemisorption and ethylene hydrogenation reactivity descriptors indicated that Ni@Pd, Ni@Pt and Mo@Pt catalysts are promising candidate for subsequent guaiacol HDO studies.
Guaiacol and anisole HDO studies suggested that the catalysts are capable of producing deoxygenation products under desirable reaction condition. The HDO results showed that Pd and Pt active sites of overlayer catalysts showed significantly enhanced deoxygenation activity compared with that of Pd or Pt only catalyst. This experimental result supports the speculation that Ni@Pd, Ni@Pt and Mo@Pt overlayer may result in slightly reduced binding strength for reactants and intermediates, and then enhancing HDO activity. Further studies showed that guaiacol and anisole could be completely deoxygenated over the silica alumina supported metal catalysts at high W/F, yielding benzene, toluene, and xylenes as major products.
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