Forums » News and Announcements

The effects of hydrogen deoxidation catalyst carrier

    • 1695 posts
    December 26, 2022 12:19 AM EST

    The effects of hydrogen deoxidation catalyst carrier on reactive activity

    At present, the most commonly used hydrogen dehydration is γ-alumina.Some literature reports that alumina is an inert carrier, and has a strong interaction between the activity components, which causes uneven dispersion of the active component on the surface of the carrier to cause the active component to be not easily vulcated and affect the desulfurization activity of the catalyst.It is also reported that titanium oxide is a hydrogen-deoxidal active carrier, which plays an electronic promotent agent during the catalytic reaction process, and there is also a metal-carrier-strong interaction (SMSI) with active components.So the question is, why is the SMSI between the alumina and metal activated components unfavorable to hydrogen dehydration, and this SMSI effect of titanium oxide is beneficial to hydrogen dehydration?Please give me advice, thank you.Get more news about Oxide Deoxidizing Catalyst,you can vist our website!
    Methane (CH4) is one of the cleanest fossil fuel resources and is playing an increasingly indispensable role in our way to carbon neutrality, by providing less carbon-intensive heat and electricity worldwide. On the other hand, the atmospheric concentration of CH4 has raced past 1,900 ppb in 2021, almost triple its pre-industrial levels. As a greenhouse gas at least 86 times as potent as carbon dioxide (CO2) over 20 years, CH4 is becoming a major threat to the global goal of deviating Earth temperature from the +2°C scenario. Consequently, all CH4-powered facilities must be strictly coupled with remediation plans for unburned CH4 in the exhaust to avoid further exacerbating the environmental stress, among which catalytic CH4 combustion (CMC) is one of the most effective strategies to solve this issue. Most current CMC catalysts are noble-metal-based owing to their outstanding C–H bond activation capability, while their high cost and poor thermal stability have driven the search for alternative options, among which transition metal oxide (TMO) catalysts have attracted extensive attention due to their Earth abundance, high thermal stability, variable oxidation states, rich acidic and basic sites, etc. To date, many TMO catalysts have shown comparable catalytic performance with that of noble metals, while their fundamental reaction mechanisms are explored to a much less extent and remain to be controversial, which hinders the further optimization of the TMO catalytic systems. Therefore, in this review, we provide a systematic compilation of the recent research advances in TMO-based CMC reactions, together with their detailed reaction mechanisms. We start with introducing the scientific fundamentals of the CMC reaction itself as well as the unique and desirable features of TMOs applied in CMC, followed by a detailed introduction of four different kinetic reaction models proposed for the reactions. Next, we categorize the TMOs of interests into single and hybrid systems, summarizing their specific morphology characterization, catalytic performance, kinetic properties, with special emphasis on the reaction mechanisms and interfacial properties. Finally, we conclude the review with a summary and outlook on the TMOs for practical CMC applications. In addition, we also further prospect the enormous potentials of TMOs in producing value-added chemicals beyond combustion, such as direct partial oxidation to methanol.