246 research outputs found

    Vanadium oxide monolayer catalysts. 3. A Raman spectroscopic and temperature-programmed reduction study of monolayer and crystal-type vanadia on various supports

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    Vanadium(V) oxide supported on 7-A1203, GO2, Cr2O3, Si02, Ti02, and Zr02 was studied by X-ray fluorescence, by X-ray diffraction, and especially by the combination of Raman spectroscopy and temperature-programmed reduction (TPR) for qualitative and quantitative structural analysis, respectively. Catalysts were prepared via ion-exchange and wet-impregnation methods. The V contents ranged from - 1 to 40 wt % V. At low surface concentrations only surface vanadate phases of two-dimensional character are observed for all carriers. According to Raman and TPR data the structure of these surface vanadate species is independent of the preparation technique. At medium and high surface concentrations, the webimpregnated samples already contain crystalline V20b At equal surface concentrations the ion-exchanged catalysts contain no V205 crystallites. An exception is Si02 on which also crystalline V206 is formed in both preparation techniques. Monolayer stability toward thermal treatment decreases in the order AZO>3 Ti02> Ce02,w hereas on heating ion-exchanged V/Si02 the crystalline V206 spreads out over the silica surface. The reducibilities of the ion-exchanged catalyats, as measured by TPR, can be used as a measure for the contact interaction between vanadia and the carrier oxides. At temperatures of 500-800 K, this interaction ranges from strong with titania to weak with silica as a carrier

    The direct synthesis of hydrogen peroxide using a combination of a hydrophobic solvent and water

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    The direct synthesis of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) has been studied using a solvent system comprising a hydrophobic alcohol (decan-1-ol) and water. It is demonstrated that, with the optimum combination of solvent and catalyst the contribution of H2O2 degradation pathways can be minimised to achieve industrially acceptable H2O2 concentrations under moderate conditions. This is achieved through the use of a catalyst that is retained by the organic component and the extraction of synthesised H2O2 into the aqueous phase, consequently limiting contact between the synthesised H2O2, catalyst and reactant gases, resulting in an improved selectivity towards H2O2. Investigation of the reaction parameters provides an insight into the proposed solvent system, and optimised conditions to produce H2O2 from molecular H2 and O2 have been identified. Through this optimisation H2O2 concentrations up to 1.9 wt% have been achieved via sequential gas replacement experiments

    Gas phase stabiliser-free production of hydrogen peroxide using supported gold-palladium catalysts

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    Hydrogen peroxide synthesis from hydrogen and oxygen in the gas phase is postulated to be a key reaction step in the gas phase epoxidation of propene using gold–titanium silicate catalysts. During this process H2O2 is consumed in a secondary step to oxidise an organic molecule so is typically not observed as a reaction product. We demonstrate that using AuPd nanoparticles, which are known to have high H2O2 synthesis rates in the liquid phase, it is possible to not only oxidise organic molecules in the gas phase but to detect H2O2 for the first time as a reaction product in both a fixed bed reactor and a pulsed Temporal Analysis of Products (TAP) reactor without stabilisers present in the gas feed. This observation opens up possibility of synthesising H2O2 directly using a gas phase reaction

    Heterogeneously Catalyzed Continuous-Flow Hydrogenation Using Segmented Flow in Capillary Columns

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    Segmented flow in standard GC capillary columns, with a heterogeneous Pd catalyst on the walls, gave rapid information about catalytic processes in them. The residence time and conversion was monitored visually, greatly simplifying bench-scale optimization. Examples show the benefits of the elimination of pore diffusion and axial dispersion. Further, we demonstrated how to quickly identify deactivating species in multistep synthesis without intermediate workup

    Overcoming the engineering constraints for scaling-up the state-of-the-art catalyst for tail-gas N2O decomposition

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    An efficient process is reported for preparing a state-of-the-art Fe-ferrierite catalyst for N2O decomposition under industrial tail-gas conditions. In the synthesis procedure we evaluate the very demanding constraints for scale-up; i.e. large reactor volumes are typically needed, long processing times and considerable amounts of waste water is generated. The proposed synthesis minimizes the amount of water used, and therefore the amount produced waste water is minimal; in this approach there is no liquid residual water stream that would need intensive processing. This has remarkable benefits in terms of process design, since the volume of equipment is reduced and the energy-intensive filtration is eliminated. This route exemplifies the concept of process intensification, with the ambition to re-engineer an existing process to make the industrial catalyst manufacture more sustainable. The so-obtained catalyst is active, selective and very stable under tail gas conditions containing H2O, NO and O2, together with N2O; keeping a high conversion during 70 h time on stream at 700 K, with a decay of 0.01%/h, while the standard reference catalyst decays at 0.06%/h; hence it deactivates six times slower, with ~5% absolute points of higher conversion. The excellent catalytic performance is ascribed to the differential speciation
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