S. Mani Sarathy
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To introduce promotional H2O effects for both CH4 rate and C2 selectivity, the OH radical formation, catalyzed through H2O activation with O2 surface species, was critical for modeling selective Mn-K2WO4/SiO2 catalysts. Based on our reported experimental evidence, which demonstrates the formation of H2O2 through surface alkali peroxide intermediate, the elementary reactions that account for the OH-mediated pathway were added into the microkinetic model. The advanced model adeptly replicated the promotional H2O effects on both OCM rate and selectivity. The data from a low-pressure microkinetic study were treated isothermally, and extended for near-industrially relevant pressures up to 901 kPa. Thermal visualization using an infrared camera found substantial temperature increases at undiluted high-pressure conditions which caused C2 selectivity to drop significantly. When the furnace temperatures were decreased after ignition, side reactions after O2 depletion (e.g., hydrocarbon reforming) were suppressed, obtaining 13.7 (11.8) % yields at 19.9 % CH4 conversion with 68.6 (59.1) % selectivities for C2-4 (C2) at 901 kPa. The temperature was found to be the determining factor of C2 yield which was perturbed by varying space velocity or CH4/O2 ratios. The optimum temperature for high-pressure conditions was predicted as 885 °C at 901 kPa. The study provides mechanistic and industrially relevant understandings for further OCM catalyst design and system application.