2020 Virtual AIChE Annual Meeting
(705a) Development of Atomically Dispersed ReOx/SiO2 Catalysts for Selective Methanol Carbonylation to Acetic Acid
Acetic acid (AA) is an important bulk commodity chemical produced primarily via methanol carbonylation using homogeneous organometallic catalysts in liquid phase reactors with corrosive halide-based co-catalysts. Here we demonstrate a heterogeneous catalyst based on atomically dispersed rhenium (ReO4) active sites on an inert support (SiO2) for stable halide-free, gas phase carbonylation of methanol to AA. Atomically-dispersed and stable ReO4 species were deposited on mesoporous high surface area (700 m2/g) inert SiO2 using triethanolamine as a dispersion promoter and characterized using scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM), UV-Vis spectroscopy and X-Ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS). While ReOx clusters (formed > 10 wt%) were primarily selective for DME formation, atomically dispersed ReO4 species (formed below 10 wt%) were found to exhibit stable (for 60 hours) > 93% selectivity to AA with single pass conversion > 60%. Kinetic analysis, in-situ FTIR and in-situ XAS suggest that the reaction mechanism involves methanol activation on Lewis acidic ReO4 sites, followed by direct CO insertion into the terminal methyl species. Further, by introducing ~0.2 wt% of atomically dispersed Rh to 10 wt% atomically dispersed ReO4 on SiO2, > 96% selectivity toward AA production at volumetric reaction rates comparable to homogeneous processes were observed. This work introduces a new class of promising heterogenous catalysts based on atomically dispersed ReO4 on inert supports for alcohol carbonylation.