2017 Annual Meeting
(585bc) Strategies for Improving Active Chemistry, Mitigation of Coke Formation and Sustaining Selectivity to Benzene in the Catalytic Aromatization of Methane
Authors
Zeolite-supported molybdenum oxide catalysts have so far been the most widely studied catalysts for the methane aromatization reaction. Rapid catalyst deactivation and low conversions are disadvantages that impede commercialization of the methane aromatization process. It is agreed that Mo carbide species, originated by exposure of the Mo oxide species to the reactant methane, are responsible for methane activation, however, the nature and amount of carbide phases formed in the induction period of the reaction are not controlled.
We have explored pretreatment conditions that are necessary to purposefully prepare zeolite-supported metal carbide phases with the best catalytic properties and relate the reaction and deactivation pathways to the structure of specific carbide phases.