2017 Annual Meeting

(585bh) Computer Generated Microkinetic Mechanisms: Applications for Catalytic Combustion of Methane on Pt

Authors

West, R. H., Northeastern University
Many processes for methane activation are performed at high temperatures and pressures, such as catalytic partial oxidation, [1] catalytic combustion, [2] and oxidative coupling.[3] Under these conditions, the heterogeneous surface kinetics can be coupled with homogeneous gas-phase chemistry. Creating a homogeneous/heterogeneous coupled mechanism that is based upon elementary reactions and is thermodynamically consistent is a major challenge in modeling and analysis of chemical reactors under industrial conditions. In most instances, either the surface or the gas-phase chemistry is treated in an ad hoc manner. Important pathways may be neglected, and the mechanism my violate fundamental principles of thermodynamics.

In this talk, we present a new tool for generating microkinetic mechanisms in heterogeneous catalysis, RMG-Cat.[4] RMG-Cat previously has been applied successfully to methane dry reforming on Nickel. In the present work, RMG-Cat was expanded to include methane oxidation on Platinum as well. Additionally, the new RMG-Cat can seamlessly handle both gas-phase and surface chemistry within a self-consistent, unified framework.

To demonstrate the new functionality of RMG-Cat, we look at recent high-temperature experimental data for the catalytic combustion of methane on a Pt gauze.2 RMG-Cat successfully generated a mechanism that includes bond fission and abstraction reactions on the catalyst surface, radical-driven chemistry in the gas phase, and adsorption/desorption kinetics for the coupling between the two regimes. The resulting mechanism ensures thermodynamic consistency by providing the rate coefficient for each reaction in a single direction and then computing the equilibrium constant from temperature-dependent free energies for gas-phase and surface intermediates.

[1] Korup, O., Goldsmith, C. F., Weinberg, G., Geske, M., Kandemir, ., Schlogl, R., Horn, R. “Catalytic partial oxidation of methane on platinum investigated by spatial reactor profiles, spatially resolved spectroscopy, and microkinetic modeling” Journal of Catalysis (2013) 297, 1-16

[2] Scwartz, H., Dong, Y., Horn, R. “Catalytic Methane Combustion on a Pt Gauze: Laser-Induced Fluorescence Spectroscopy, Species Profiles, and Simulations” Chem. Eng. Technol. (2016) 39, 2011-209

[3] Karakaya, C., Kee, R. J. “Progress in the direct catalytic conversion of methane to fuels and chemicals” Prog. Energy Comb. Sci (2016) 55, 60-97

[4] Goldsmith, C. F., West, R. H. “Automatic Generation of Microkinetic Mechanisms for Heterogeneous Catalysis” J. Phys. Chem. C. http://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcc.7b02133