Modulating the Formation of Coke to Improve the Production of Light Olefins from CO2 Hydrogenation over In2O3 and SSZ-13 Catalysts

Wei Di, Abdenour Achour, Phuoc Hoang Ho, Sreetama Ghosh, Oleg Pajalic, Lars Josefsson, Louise Olsson, Derek Creaser

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Moderately acidic aluminophosphates (SAPOs) are often integrated with methanol synthesis catalysts for the hydrogenation of CO2 to olefins, but they suffer from hydrothermal decomposition. Here, an alternative SSZ-13 zeolite with high hydrothermal stability is synthesized and coupled with an In2O3 catalyst in a hybrid system. Its performance regarding selectivity for olefins and coke formation was investigated for CO2 hydrogenation under varying temperatures and pressures. Various reactions occur, producing mainly CO and different hydrocarbons. The results indicate that the hydrogenation of hydrocarbons are dominant at high temperatures (around 400 °C) over SSZ-13 zeolite with a high acid density and that the coke deposition rate is slow. Polymethylbenzenes are the main coke species, but the selectivity for light olefins is low among hydrocarbons at high temperatures. However, at low temperatures (around 325 °C), and especially under high pressure (40 bar), methanol disproportionation becomes significant. This results in an increased selectivity for light olefins; however, it also leads to a rapid coke deposition, which gives inactive adamantanes as the main coke species that block the pores and cause rapid deactivation. However, after coking at 325 °C and regeneration at 400 °C under the reaction atmosphere, the accumulated adamantanes can be decomposed into smaller coke species, which reopens the channel structure and generates modulated active sites within the zeolite, resulting in a higher yield of olefins without deactivation. The performances of acidic SSZ-13 zeolites, with varying ratios of Si/Al in transient experiments, further verified that a dynamic balance exists between the formation and degradation of coke within the SSZ-13 zeolite during a long-term CO2 hydrogenation reaction. This balance can be achieved by optimizing the reaction conditions to match the acid density of the catalyst. Using the conditions of 20 bar and 375 °C, with a H2 to CO2 mole ratio of 3, the results obtained for the precoked hybrid catalysts of In2O3 and SSZ-13 (Si/Al = 25) exhibited very stable activity, with the selectivity for light olefins (based on hydrocarbons formed) of max. 70% after 100 h time-on-stream. This work provides new insights into the design of stable hybrid catalysts, especially the influence of a precoking process for SSZ-13 zeolite in the production of light olefins.
Original languageEnglish
JournalEnergy & Fuels
Volume37
Issue number22
Pages (from-to)17382-17398
Number of pages17
ISSN0887-0624
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2023
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

doi: 10.1021/acs.energyfuels.3c03172

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