A packed
bed containing a physical mixture of both Zn–Zr
mixed oxide catalyst and SAPO-34 converts syngas directly into a mixture
of C2–C5 olefins and paraffins. Specifically,
the mixed oxide catalyst is responsible for intermediate oxygenate
synthesis from syngas while the molecular sieve catalyzes olefin synthesis
from the oxygenate intermediates. Kinetic measurements with cofed
propylene over each catalyst independently confirm olefin hydrogenation
activity over both components of the composite bed. The addition of
either water or CO to the feed drops the activity of propylene hydrogenation
over the Zn–Zr oxide. In sum, under reaction conditions of
syngas feed and produced water, olefin hydrogenation predominantly
occurs over the SAPO-34 catalyst, rather than over the catalyst responsible
for hydrogenating CO into oxygenate intermediates. A developed kinetic
model consistent with this conclusion describes measurements at differing
feed compositions, temperatures, space velocities, and bed catalyst
mixing ratios. Technoeconomic analysis of the process indicates that
the olefin-to-paraffin ratio is a key performance metric for commercial
scale syngas conversion and highlights the importance of considering
olefin hydrogenation rates over the molecular sieve component