Two-dimensional modeling of partial oxidation of methane on rhodium in a short contact time reactor

被引:0
|
作者
Univ of Minnesota, Minneapolis, United States [1 ]
机构
来源
Symp Int Combust | / 2283-2291期
关键词
Catalysis - Catalysts - Catalytic converters - Gas adsorption - Heat transfer - Mass transfer - Mathematical models - Methane - Oxidation - Reaction kinetics - Rhodium - Synthesis gas;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Partial oxidation of methane in monolithic catalysts at very short contact times has recently been shown to offer a promising route to convert natural gas into syngas (CO, H2), which can subsequently be converted to higher alkanes or methanol. Detailed models are needed to understand the complex interaction of transport and kinetics occurring in these reactors. In this work, the partial oxidation of methane on rhodium is studied numerically as an example of short contact time reactor modeling. A tube wall catalytic reactor, which serves to model a single pore or channel of the monolithic catalyst, is simulated. The simulation is carried out using a fully two-dimensional flowfield description, which is coupled with a detailed surface reaction model. The catalyst is characterized by its temperature and coverages of adsorbed species, which vary in the flow direction. The simulation offers a detailed description of the complex interaction between mass and heat transfer as well as chemistry. At the catalyst entrance, an extremely rapid variation of temperature, velocity, and transport coefficients is found. The competition between complete and partial methane oxidation is explained using the calculated surface coverages whereby CO2 and H2O are formed in the entrance region of the catalytic reactor. Methane conversion as well as H2 and CO selectivity are found to increase with increasing temperature. Increasing reactor pressure reduces methane conversion, although the syngas selectivity decreases only slightly.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] In situ diagnostics and modeling of methane catalytic partial oxidation on Pt in a stagnation-flow reactor
    Taylor, JD
    Allendorf, MD
    McDaniel, AH
    Rice, SF
    INDUSTRIAL & ENGINEERING CHEMISTRY RESEARCH, 2003, 42 (25) : 6559 - 6566
  • [42] Modeling and Simulation of Titania Synthesis in Two-dimensional Methane–air Flames
    Guanghai Wang
    Sean C. Garrick
    Journal of Nanoparticle Research, 2005, 7 : 621 - 632
  • [43] Modeling of termokinetic oscillations at partial oxidation of methane
    Arutyunov, A. V.
    Belyaev, A. A.
    Inovenkov, I. N.
    Nefedov, V. V.
    6TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON MATHEMATICAL MODELLING IN PHYSICAL SCIENCES (IC-MSQUARE 2017), 2017, 936
  • [44] Role of Potassium and Phosphorus in Catalytic Partial Oxidation in Short Contact Time Reactors
    Chakrabarti, Reetam
    Schmidt, Lanny D.
    ENERGY & FUELS, 2015, 29 (12) : 8102 - 8109
  • [45] Modeling of on-line catalyst addition effects in a short contact time reactor
    Zerkle, DK
    Allendorf, MD
    Wolf, M
    Deutschmann, O
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE COMBUSTION INSTITUTE, 2000, 28 : 1365 - 1372
  • [46] Partial oxidation of alkanes at short contact times
    Goetsch, DA
    Witt, PM
    Schmidt, LD
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 1996, 211 : 179 - COLL
  • [47] Two-dimensional partial cubes
    Chepoi, Victor
    Knauer, Kolj A.
    Philibert, Manon
    ELECTRONIC JOURNAL OF COMBINATORICS, 2020, 27 (03): : 1 - 40
  • [48] Partial oxidation of methane over rhodium catalysts for power generation applications
    Eriksson, S
    Nilsson, M
    Boutonnet, M
    Järås, S
    CATALYSIS TODAY, 2005, 100 (3-4) : 447 - 451
  • [49] Microstructured rhodium catalysts for the partial oxidation of methane to syngas under pressure
    Fichtner, M
    Mayer, J
    Wolf, D
    Schubert, A
    INDUSTRIAL & ENGINEERING CHEMISTRY RESEARCH, 2001, 40 (16) : 3475 - 3483
  • [50] Hysteresis and reaction characterization of methane catalytic partial oxidation on rhodium catalyst
    Chen, Wei-Hsin
    Chiu, Tin-Wei
    Hung, Chen-I
    Lin, Mu-Rong
    JOURNAL OF POWER SOURCES, 2009, 194 (01) : 467 - 477