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Substitution of Co with Ni in Co/Al2O3 Catalysts for Fischer–Tropsch Synthesis

Authors :
Christopher L. Marshall
Donald C. Cronauer
Wilson D. Shafer
Richard Garcia
Gary Jacobs
Sai Charan Karuturi
Michela Martinelli
A. Jeremy Kropf
Caleb D. Watson
Source :
Catalysts, Volume 10, Issue 3, Catalysts, Vol 10, Iss 3, p 334 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute, 2020.

Abstract

The effect of cobalt substitution with nickel was investigated for the Fischer&ndash<br />Tropsch synthesis reaction. Catalysts having different Ni/Co ratios were prepared by aqueous incipient wetness co-impregnation, characterized, and tested using a continuously stirred tank reactor (CSTR) for more than 200 h. The addition of nickel did not significantly modify the morphological properties measured. XRD, STEM, and TPR-XANES results showed intimate contact between nickel and cobalt, strongly suggesting the formation of a Co-Ni solid oxide solution in each case. Moreover, TPR-XANES indicated that nickel addition improves the cobalt reducibility. This may be due to H2 dissociation and spillover, but is more likely the results of a chemical effect of intimate contact between Co and Ni resulting in Co-Ni alloying after activation. FTS testing revealed a lower initial activity when nickel was added. However, CO conversion continuously increased with time on-stream until a steady-state value (34%&ndash<br />37% depending on Ni/Co ratio) was achieved, which was very close to the value observed for undoped Co/Al2O3. This trend suggests nickel can stabilize cobalt nanoparticles even at a lower weight percentage of Co. Currently, the cobalt price is 2.13 times the price of nickel. Thus, comparing the activity/price, the catalyst with a Ni/Co ratio of 25/75 has better performance than the unpromoted catalyst. Finally, nickel-promoted catalysts exhibited slightly higher initial selectivity for light hydrocarbons, but this difference typically diminished with time on-stream<br />once leveling off in conversion was achieved, the C5+ selectivities were similar (&asymp<br />80%) for Ni/Co ratios up to 10/90, and only slightly lower (&asymp<br />77%) at Ni/Co of 25/75.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20734344
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Catalysts
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....696246784a086fdfca648efbaaad39b5
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/catal10030334