Evaluation of catalyst deactivation during catalytic steam reforming of biomass-derived syngas

被引:72
作者
Bain, RL [1 ]
Dayton, DC [1 ]
Carpenter, DL [1 ]
Czernik, SR [1 ]
Feik, CJ [1 ]
French, RJ [1 ]
Magrini-Bair, KA [1 ]
Phillips, SD [1 ]
机构
[1] Natl Renewable Energy Lab, Golden, CO 80401 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1021/ie050098w
中图分类号
TQ [化学工业];
学科分类号
0817 ;
摘要
Mitigation of tars produced during biomass gasification continues to be a technical barrier to developing systems. This effort combined the measurement of tar-reforming catalyst deactivation kinetics and the production of syngas in a pilot-scale biomass gasification system at a single steady-state condition with mixed woods, producing a gas with an H-2-to-CO ratio of 2 and 13% methane. A slipstream from this process was introduced into a bench-scale 5.25 cm diameter fluidized-bed catalyst reactor charged with an alkali-promoted Ni-based/Al2O3 catalyst. Catalyst conversion tests were performed at a constant space time and five temperatures from 775 to 875 degrees C. The initial catalyst-reforming activity for all measured components (benzene, toluene, naphthalene, and total tars) except light hydrocarbons was 100%. The residual steady-state conversion of tar ranged from 96.6% at 875 degrees C to 70.5% at 775 degrees C. Residual steady-state conversions at 875 'C for benzene and methane were 81% and 32%, respectively. Catalytic deactivation models with residual activity were developed and evaluated based on experimentally measured changes in conversion efficiencies as a function of time on stream for the catalytic reforming of tars, benzene, methane, and ethane. Both first- and second-order models were evaluated for the reforming reaction and for catalyst deactivation. Comparison of experimental and modeling results showed that the reforming reactions were adequately modeled by either first-order or second-order global kinetic expressions. However, second-order kinetics resulted in negative activation energies for deactivation. Activation energies were determined for first-order reforming reactions and catalyst deactivation. For reforming, the representative activation energies were 32 kJ/g(.)mol for ethane, 19 kJ/g(.)mol for tars, 45 kJ/g(.)mol for tars plus benzene, and 8-9 kJ/g(.)mol for benzene and toluene. For catalyst deactivation, representative activation energies were 146 kJ/g(.)mol for ethane, 121 kJ/g(.)mol for tars plus benzene, 74 kJ/g(.)mol for benzene, and 19 kJ/g(.)mol for total tars. Methane was also modeled by a second-order reaction, with an activation energy of 18.6 kJ/g(.)mol and a catalyst deactivation energy of 5.8 kJ/g(.)mol.
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收藏
页码:7945 / 7956
页数:12
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