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Introduction to Catalysis and Industrial Catalytic Processes - Robert J. Farrauto, Lucas Dorazio, C. H. Bartholomew

Introduction to Catalysis and Industrial Catalytic Processes

Buch | Hardcover
352 Seiten
2016
Wiley-AIChE (Verlag)
978-1-118-45460-2 (ISBN)
CHF 189,95 inkl. MwSt
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Introduces major catalytic processes including products from the petroleum, chemical, environmental and alternative energy industries. This book provides a description of the fundamentals of catalysis and some of the major catalytic industrial processes used today. It offers a rationale for process designs based on kinetics and thermodynamics.
Introduces major catalytic processes including products from the petroleum, chemical, environmental and alternative energy industries



Provides an easy to read description of the fundamentals of catalysis and some of the major catalytic industrial processes used today
Offers a rationale for process designs based on kinetics and thermodynamics
Alternative energy topics include the hydrogen economy, fuels cells, bio catalytic (enzymes) production of ethanol fuel from corn and biodiesel from vegetable oils
Problem sets of included with answers available to faculty who use the book


Review:
"In less than 300 pages, it serves as an excellent introduction to these subjects whether for advanced students or those seeking to learn more about these subjects on their own time...Particularly useful are the succinct summaries throughout the book...excellent detail in the table of contents, a detailed index, key references at the end of each chapter, and challenging classroom questions..." (GlobalCatalysis.com, May 2016)

Robert J. Farrauto, PHD, is Professor of Practice in the Earth and Environmental Engineering Department at Columbia University in the City of New York. He retired from BASF (formerly Engelhard) as a Research Vice President after 37 years of service. He has over 40 years industrial experience in catalysis and has commercialized a number of technologies in the environmental, chemical and alternative energy fields. He holds 58 US patents and over 115 peer-reviewed journal publications. He teaches graduate and undergraduate courses focusing on catalysis. He is a co-author of Fundamentals of Industrial Catalytic Processes, 2nd Edition and Catalytic Air Pollution Control: Commercial Technology, 3rd Edition. Lucas Dorazio, PhD is a Research Chemical Engineer at BASF Corporation, Iselin, NJ where he is engaged in reforming and environmental technology. He is also Adjunct assistant professor at New Jersey Institute of Technology where he teaches environmental and industrial catalysis.  Calvin H. Bartholomew, PhD is Emeritus Professor at Brigham Young University. He continues to conduct catalysis research, is active in consulting and does specialized teaching for AICHE short courses in catalysis. He has been principal investigator or co-investigator on over 60 grants and contracts and has supervised more than 175 research students. He is the author or co-author of 5 books and 120 peer-reviewed papers and reviews with emphasis on catalysis.

Preface xv

Acknowledgments xvii

List of Figures xix

Nomenclature xxvii

Chapter 1 Catalyst Fundamentals of Industrial Catalysis 1

1.1 Introduction 1

1.2 Catalyzed versus Noncatalyzed Reactions 1

1.2.1 Example Reaction: Liquid-Phase Redox Reaction 2

1.2.2 Example Reaction: Gas-Phase Oxidation Reaction 4

1.3 Physical Structure of a Heterogeneous Catalyst 6

1.3.1 Active Catalytic Species 7

1.3.2 Chemical and Textural Promoters 7

1.3.3 Carrier Materials 8

1.3.4 Structure of the Catalyst and Catalytic Reactor 8

1.4 Adsorption and Kinetically Controlled Models for Heterogeneous Catalysis 10

1.4.1 Langmuir Isotherm 11

1.4.2 Reaction Kinetic Models 13

1.4.2.1 Langmuir–Hinshelwood Kinetics for CO Oxidation on Pt 14

1.4.2.2 Mars–van Krevelen Kinetic Mechanism 17

1.4.2.3 Eley–Rideal (E–R) Kinetic Mechanism 18

1.4.2.4 Kinetic versus Empirical Rate Models 18

1.5 Supported Catalysts: Dispersed Model 19

1.5.1 Chemical and Physical Steps Occurring during Heterogeneous Catalysis 19

1.5.2 Reactant Concentration Gradients within the Catalyzed Material 22

1.5.3 The Rate-Limiting Step 22

1.6 Selectivity 24

1.6.1 Examples of Selectivity Calculations for Reactions with Multiple Products 25

1.6.2 Carbon Balance 26

1.6.3 Experimental Methods for Measuring Carbon Balance 27

Questions 27

Bibliography 29

Chapter 2 The Preparation of Catalytic Materials 31

2.1 Introduction 31

2.2 Carrier Materials 32

2.2.1 Al2O3 32

2.2.2 SiO2 34

2.2.3 TiO2 34

2.2.4 Zeolites 35

2.2.5 Carbons 37

2.3 Incorporating the Active Material into the Carrier 37

2.3.1 Impregnation 37

2.3.2 Incipient Wetness or Capillary Impregnation 38

2.3.3 Electrostatic Adsorption 38

2.3.4 Ion Exchange 38

2.3.5 Fixing the Catalytic Species 39

2.3.6 Drying and Calcination 39

2.4 Forming the Final Shape of the Catalyst 40

2.4.1 Powders 40

2.4.1.1 Milling and Sieving 41

2.4.1.2 Spray Drying 42

2.4.2 Pellets, Pills, and Rings 43

2.4.3 Extrudates 43

2.4.4 Granules 44

2.4.5 Monoliths 44

2.5 Catalyst Physical Structure and Its Relationship to Performance 45

2.6 Nomenclature for Dispersed Catalysts 45

Questions 46

Bibliography 46

Chapter 3 Catalyst Characterization 48

3.1 Introduction 48

3.2 Physical Properties of Catalysts 49

3.2.1 Surface Area and Pore Size 49

3.2.1.1 Nitrogen Porosimetry 49

3.2.1.2 Pore Size by Mercury Intrusion 51

3.2.2 Particle Size Distribution of Particulate Catalyst 51

3.2.2.1 Particle Size Distribution 51

3.2.2.2 Mechanical Strength 53

3.2.3 Physical Properties of Environmental Washcoated Monolith Catalysts 54

3.2.3.1 Washcoat Thickness 54

3.2.3.2 Washcoat Adhesion 54

3.3 Chemical and Physical Morphology Structures of Catalytic Materials 54

3.3.1 Elemental Analysis 54

3.3.2 Thermal Gravimetric Analysis and Differential Thermal Analysis 55

3.3.3 The Morphology of Catalytic Materials by Scanning Electron Microscopy 56

3.3.4 Structural Analysis by X-Ray Diffraction 57

3.3.5 Structure and Morphology of Al2O3 Carriers 58

3.3.6 Dispersion or Crystallite Size of Catalytic Species 58

3.3.6.1 Chemisorption 58

3.3.6.2 Transmission Electron Microscopy 61

3.3.7 X-Ray Diffraction 62

3.3.8 Surface Composition of Catalysts by X-Ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy 62

3.3.9 The Bonding Environment of Metal Oxides by Nuclear Magnetic Resonance 64

3.4 Spectroscopy 65

Questions 66

Bibliography 67

Chapter 4 Reaction Rate in Catalytic Reactors 69

4.1 Introduction 69

4.2 Space Velocity, Space Time, and Residence Time 69

4.3 Definition of Reaction Rate 71

4.4 Rate of Surface Kinetics 72

4.4.1 Empirical Power Rate Expressions 72

4.4.2 Experimental Measurement of Empirical Kinetic Parameters 73

4.4.3 Accounting for Chemical Equilibrium in Empirical Rate Expression 77

4.4.4 Special Case for First-Order Isothermal Reaction 77

4.5 Rate of Bulk Mass Transfer 78

4.5.1 Overview of Bulk Mass Transfer Rate 78

4.5.2 Origin of Bulk Mass Transfer Rate Expression 79

4.6 Rate of Pore Diffusion 80

4.6.1 Overview of Pore Diffusion 80

4.6.2 Pore Diffusion Theory 81

4.7 Apparent Activation Energy and the Rate-Limiting Process 82

4.8 Reactor Bed Pressure Drop 83

4.9 Summary 84

Questions 84

Bibliography 87

Chapter 5 Catalyst Deactivation 88

5.1 Introduction 88

5.2 Thermally Induced Deactivation 88

5.2.1 Sintering of the Catalytic Species 89

5.2.2 Sintering of Carrier 92

5.2.3 Catalytic Species–Carrier Interactions 95

5.3 Poisoning 96

5.3.1 Selective Poisoning 96

5.3.2 Nonselective Poisoning or Masking 97

5.4 Coke Formation and Catalyst Regeneration 99

Questions 101

Bibliography 103

Chapter 6 Generating Hydrogen and Synthesis Gas by Catalytic Hydrocarbon Steam Reforming 104

6.1 Introduction 104

6.1.1 Why Steam Reforming with Hydrocarbons? 104

6.2 Large-Scale Industrial Process for Hydrogen Generation 105

6.2.1 General Overview 105

6.2.2 Hydrodesulfurization 106

6.2.3 Hydrogen via Steam Reforming and Partial Oxidation 106

6.2.3.1 Steam Reforming 106

6.2.3.2 Deactivation of Steam Reforming Catalyst 110

6.2.3.3 Pre-reforming 111

6.2.3.4 Partial Oxidation and Autothermal Reforming 111

6.2.4 Water Gas Shift 112

6.2.4.1 Deactivation of Water Gas Shift Catalyst 116

6.2.5 Safety Considerations During Catalyst Removal 116

6.2.6 Other CO Removal Methods 116

6.2.6.1 Pressure Swing Absorption 116

6.2.6.2 Methanation 117

6.2.6.3 Preferential Oxidation of CO 117

6.2.7 Hydrogen Generation for Ammonia Synthesis 119

6.2.8 Hydrogen Generation for Methanol Synthesis 120

6.2.9 Synthesis Gas for Fischer–Tropsch Synthesis 120

6.3 Hydrogen Generation for Fuel Cells 121

6.3.1 New Catalyst and Reactor Designs for the Hydrogen Economy 122

6.3.2 Steam Reforming 123

6.3.3 Water Gas Shift 124

6.3.4 Preferential Oxidation 125

6.3.5 Combustion 125

6.3.6 Autothermal Reforming for Complicated Fuels 126

6.3.7 Steam Reforming of Methanol: Portable Power Applications 126

6.4 Summary 126

Questions 127

Bibliography 128

Chapter 7 Ammonia, Methanol, Fischer–Tropsch Production 129

7.1 Ammonia Synthesis 129

7.1.1 Thermodynamics 129

7.1.2 Reaction Chemistry and Catalyst Design 130

7.1.3 Process Design 132

7.1.4 Catalyst Deactivation 134

7.2 Methanol Synthesis 134

7.2.1 Process Design 136

7.2.1.1 Quench Reactor 136

7.2.1.2 Staged Cooling Reactor 137

7.2.1.3 Tube-Cooled Reactor 137

7.2.1.4 Shell-Cooled Reactor 138

7.2.2 Catalyst Deactivation 139

7.3 Fischer–Tropsch Synthesis 140

7.3.1 Process Design 142

7.3.1.1 Bubble/Slurry-Phase Process 142

7.3.1.2 Packed Bed Process 143

7.3.1.3 Slurry/Loop Reactor (Synthol Process) 143

7.3.2 Catalyst Deactivation 143

Questions 144

Bibliography 145

Chapter 8 Selective Oxidations 146

8.1 Nitric Acid 146

8.1.1 Reaction Chemistry and Catalyst Design 146

8.1.1.1 The Importance of Catalyst Selectivity 147

8.1.1.2 The PtRh Alloy Catalyst 147

8.1.2 Nitric Acid Production Process 148

8.1.3 Catalyst Deactivation 150

8.2 Hydrogen Cyanide 151

8.2.1 HCN Production Process 152

8.2.2 Deactivation 152

8.3 The Claus Process: Oxidation of H2S 154

8.3.1 Clause Process Description 154

8.3.2 Catalyst Deactivation 155

8.4 Sulfuric Acid 155

8.4.1 Sulfuric Acid Production Process 155

8.4.2 Catalyst Deactivation 158

8.5 Ethylene Oxide 159

8.5.1 Catalyst 159

8.5.2 Catalyst Deactivation 160

8.5.3 Ethylene Oxide Production Process 160

8.6 Formaldehyde 160

8.6.1 Low-Methanol Production Process 162

8.6.1.1 Fe+Mo Catalyst 162

8.6.2 High-Methanol Production Process 163

8.6.2.1 Ag Catalyst 164

8.7 Acrylic Acid 164

8.7.1 Acrylic Acid Production Process 164

8.7.2 Acrylic Acid Catalyst 165

8.7.3 Catalyst Deactivation 166

8.8 Maleic Anhydride 166

8.8.1 Catalyst Deactivation 166

8.9 Acrylonitrile 166

8.9.1 Acrylonitrile Production Process 167

8.9.2 Catalyst 168

8.9.3 Deactivation 168

Questions 168

Bibliography 169

Chapter 9 Hydrogenation, Dehydrogenation, and Alkylation 171

9.1 Introduction 171

9.2 Hydrogenation 171

9.2.1 Hydrogenation in Stirred Tank Reactors 171

9.2.2 Kinetics of a Slurry-Phase Hydrogenation Reaction 174

9.2.3 Design Equation for the Continuous Stirred Tank Reactor 176

9.3 Hydrogenation Reactions and Catalysts 177

9.3.1 Hydrogenation of Vegetable Oils for Edible Food Products 177

9.3.2 Hydrogenation of Functional Groups 180

9.3.3 Biomass (Corn Husks) to a Polymer 183

9.3.4 Comparing Base Metal and Precious Metal Catalysts 183

9.4 Dehydrogenation 185

9.5 Alkylation 187

Questions 188

Bibliography 189

Chapter 10 Petroleum Processing 190

10.1 Crude Oil 190

10.2 Distillation 191

10.3 Hydrodemetalization and Hydrodesulfurization 193

10.4 Hydrocarbon Cracking 197

10.4.1 Fluid Catalytic Cracking 197

10.4.2 Hydrocracking 200

10.5 Naphtha Reforming 200

Questions 202

Bibliography 203

Chapter 11 Homogeneous Catalysis and Polymerization Catalysts 205

11.1 Introduction to Homogeneous Catalysis 205

11.2 Hydroformylation: Aldehydes from Olefins 206

11.3 Carboxylation: Acetic Acid Production 208

11.4 Enzymatic Catalysis 209

11.5 Polyolefins 210

11.5.1 Polyethylene 210

11.5.2 Polypropylene 212

Questions 213

Bibliography 213

Chapter 12 Catalytic Treatment from Stationary Sources: Hc, Co, Nox, and O3 215

12.1 Introduction 215

12.2 Catalytic Incineration of Hydrocarbons and Carbon Monoxide 216

12.2.1 Monolith (Honeycomb) Reactors 218

12.2.2 Catalyzed Monolith (Honeycomb) Structures 219

12.2.3 Reactor Sizing 220

12.2.4 Catalyst Deactivation 222

12.2.5 Regeneration of Deactivated Catalysts 224

12.3 Food Processing 225

12.3.1 Catalyst Deactivation 226

12.4 Nitrogen Oxide (NOx) Reduction from Stationary Sources 226

12.4.1 SCR Technology 227

12.4.2 Ozone Abatement in Aircraft Cabin Air 229

12.4.3 Deactivation 229

12.5 CO2 Reduction 230

Questions 231

Bibliography 233

Chapter 13 Catalytic Abatement of Gasoline Engine Emissions 235

13.1 Emissions and Regulations 235

13.1.1 Origins of Emissions 235

13.1.2 Regulations in the United States 236

13.1.3 The Federal Test Procedure for the United States 238

13.2 Catalytic Reactions Occurring During Catalytic Abatement 238

13.3 First-Generation Converters: Oxidation Catalyst 239

13.4 The Failure of Nonprecious Metals: A Summary of Catalyst History 240

13.4.1 Deactivation and Stabilization of Precious Metal Oxidation Catalysts 241

13.5 Supporting the Catalyst in the Exhaust 242

13.5.1 Ceramic Monoliths 242

13.5.2 Metal Monoliths 245

13.6 Preparing the Monolith Catalyst 246

13.7 Rate Control Regimes in Automotive Catalysts 247

13.8 Catalyzed Monolith Nomenclature 248

13.9 Precious Metal Recovery from Catalytic Converters 248

13.10 Monitoring Catalytic Activity in a Monolith 248

13.11 The Failure of the Traditional Beaded (Particulate) Catalysts for Automotive Applications 250

13.12 NOx, CO and HC Reduction: The Three-Way Catalyst 251

13.13 Simulated Aging Methods 255

13.14 Close-Coupled Catalyst 256

13.15 Final Comments 258

Questions 259

Bibliography 261

Chapter 14 Diesel Engine Emission Abatement 262

14.1 Introduction 262

14.1.1 Emissions from Diesel Engines 262

14.1.2 Analytical Procedures for Particulates 264

14.2 Catalytic Technology for Reducing Emissions from Diesel Engines 265

14.2.1 Diesel Oxidation Catalyst 265

14.2.2 Diesel Soot Abatement 266

14.2.3 Controlling NOx in Diesel Engine Exhaust 267

Questions 272

Bibliography 273

Chapter 15 Alternative Energy Sources Using Catalysis: Bioethanol by Fermentation, Biodiesel by Transesterification, and H2-Based Fuel Cells 274

15.1 Introduction: Sources of Non-Fossil Fuel Energy 274

15.2 Sources of Non-Fossil Fuels 276

15.2.1 Biodiesel 276

15.2.1.1 Production Process 276

15.2.2 Bioethanol 277

15.2.2.1 Process for Bioethanol from Corn 278

15.2.3 Lignocellulose Biomass 278

15.2.4 New Sources of Natural Gas and Oil Sands 279

15.3 Fuel Cells 279

15.3.1 Markets for Fuel Cells 281

15.3.1.1 Transportation Applications 281

15.3.1.2 Stationary Applications 282

15.3.1.3 Portable Power Applications 282

15.4 Types of Fuel Cells 283

15.4.1 Low-Temperature PEM Fuel Cell 284

15.4.1.1 Electrochemical Reactions for H2-Fueled Systems 284

15.4.1.2 Mechanistic Principles of the PEM Fuel Cell 286

15.4.1.3 Membrane Electrode Assembly 287

15.4.2 Solid Polymer Membrane 288

15.4.3 PEM Fuel Cells Based on Direct Methanol 289

15.4.4 Alkaline Fuel Cell 290

15.4.5 Phosphoric Acid Fuel Cell 290

15.4.6 Molten Carbonate Fuel Cell 291

15.4.7 Solid Oxide Fuel Cell 293

15.5 The Ideal Hydrogen Economy 293

Questions 294

Bibliography 295

Index 297

Erscheint lt. Verlag 27.5.2016
Sprache englisch
Maße 155 x 239 mm
Gewicht 544 g
Themenwelt Naturwissenschaften Chemie Technische Chemie
Technik Umwelttechnik / Biotechnologie
ISBN-10 1-118-45460-X / 111845460X
ISBN-13 978-1-118-45460-2 / 9781118454602
Zustand Neuware
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