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Catalyst regeneration using CO 2 as reactant through reverse‐Boudouard reaction with coke
Author(s) -
Pereira Sérgio Castro,
Ribeiro M. Filipa,
Batalha Nuno,
Pereira Marcelo Maciel
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
greenhouse gases: science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.45
H-Index - 32
ISSN - 2152-3878
DOI - 10.1002/ghg.1692
Subject(s) - vanadium , catalysis , coke , chemistry , activation energy , refinery , inorganic chemistry , sodium , potassium , metal , chemical engineering , organic chemistry , engineering
The possibility of CO 2 recycling into standard refinery can largely mitigate greenhouse gas emissions. It was previously demonstrated that alumina modified by either potassium or lithium in the presence of vanadium was able to promote the reaction of CO 2 with coke in the presence of O 2 during the regeneration step of a spent catalyst. Herein, vanadium‐sodium and vanadium‐calcium on alumina were used to achieve that reaction. These catalysts showed slightly lower conversion compared to previously catalysts. However, regardless of the type of group I and II elements, all catalysts showed very similar apparent activation energy (Ea app ) for the coke oxidation with CO 2 reaction ( C O 2 + c o k e t o 2.6 p c → E a a p pC O + c o k e − O ), i.e., in the range of 188–193 kJ.mol −1 . In contrast without vanadium, Ea app was in the range of 242–253 kJ.mol −1 . Therefore, CO 2 is activated in a site composed of V‐O‐(group I or II) in the coke proximity. Moreover, these results clearly support that vanadium plays the main role in the type of activation complex, independently of the group I and II metal used and most probably in the dissociative step of CO 2 . © 2017 Society of Chemical Industry and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.