2024 AIChE Annual Meeting
(511a) Transient Pseudo-Random Binary Sequence (PRBS) Gas Injections for the Determination of Elementary Rate Constants
Authors
An in-house reactor designed for transient PRBS experiments is used for experimental data collection. The main components of the reactor are a fast-acting solenoid valve capable of time-scales ranging from milliseconds to minutes, an interchangeable furnace or differentially scanning calorimeter (DSC), and a Hiden HPR-20 mass spectrometer. For initial experiments, CO oxidation on Pd/SiO2 is studied. Helium and oxygen are continuously fed into a plug-flow reactor. Carbon monoxide gas (50% CO/5% Ar/He) is pulsed into the reactor. An argon tracer is used to correct for system dynamics and reconstruct the reactor inlet profile. During experiments, CO (m/z = 28), O2 (m/z = 16), CO2 (m/z = 44), Ar (m/z = 40), and pressure are followed.
Simulated kinetic modeling indicates elementary rate constants are determined with higher confidence and accuracy when a transient PRBS inlet is used compared to steady-state or a single pulse. Experimental PRBS data has been collected and modeled for CO oxidation on Pd/SiO2 catalysts. Sequences are conducted at different temperatures and modeled to predict elementary rate constants as a function of temperature. Assuming an Arrhenius dependence for all elementary reactions allows for the calculation of activation energy for each elementary step. PRBS methodology aims to improve catalytic mechanism understanding and the speed at which it is done.