L.M. van Koppen
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1
Tuning stability of titania-supported Fischer-Tropsch catalysts
Impact of surface area and noble metal promotion
Cobalt oxidation is a relevant deactivation pathway of titania-supported cobalt catalysts used in Fischer-Tropsch synthesis (FTS). To work towards more stable catalysts, we studied the effect of the surface area of the titania support and noble metal promotion on cobalt oxidation under simulated high conversion conditions. Mössbauer spectroscopy was used to follow the evolution of cobalt during reduction and FTS operation as a function of the steam pressure. The reduction of the oxidic cobalt precursor becomes more difficult due to stronger metal-support interactions when the titania surface area is increased. The reducibility was so low for cobalt on GP350 titania (surface area 283 m2/g) that the catalytical activity was negligible. Although cobalt was more difficult to reduce on P90 titania (94 m2/g) than on commonly used P25 titania (50 m2/g), the Co/P90 catalyst showed increased resistance against cobalt sintering and higher FTS performance than Co/P25. The addition of platinum to Co/P90 led to a higher reduction degree of cobalt and a higher cobalt dispersion, representing a catalyst with promising performance at relatively low steam pressure. Nevertheless, the stronger cobalt-titania interactions result in more extensive deactivation at high steam pressure due to oxidation.
The study of titania-supported cobalt nanoparticles is relevant for industrial Fischer-Tropsch synthesis (FTS). Herein, we report about various deactivation pathways of cobalt supported on P25 titania (cobalt loading 2–8 wt%) under simulated high conversion conditions using in situ Mössbauer spectroscopy. A fraction of metallic cobalt was oxidized under humid FTS conditions. The absolute amount of oxidized cobalt was ∼ 1.2 wt% independent of the cobalt loading, indicating that specific cobalt-titanol interactions are involved in the oxidation process. The formation of cobalt-titanate-like compounds was only observed under very high water-to-hydrogen ratios in the absence of carbon monoxide. Steam considerably enhances cobalt sintering under FTS conditions. As such, deactivation under humid FTS conditions is not only caused by cobalt oxidation but also by enhancing sintering of the active phase.
Understanding the deactivation mechanism of cobalt-based Fischer-Tropsch catalysts is of significant practical importance. Herein, we explored the role of manganese as a structural promoter on silica-supported cobalt nanoparticles under simulated high CO conversion conditions, i.e., high relative humidity. The structural changes in cobalt dispersion and oxidation state were followed by in situ Mössbauer emission spectroscopy. Adding manganese oxide to silica-supported cobalt enhanced the dispersion of metallic cobalt in the reduced catalysts. This higher cobalt dispersion, however, led to a stronger tendency of cobalt silicate formation under humid conditions. Without manganese, the cobalt particles sintered, and the larger ones were prone to transformation into cobalt carbide under high conversion conditions. As such, silica is not preferred as a support for practical FTS.
The commercial application of cobalt-based Fischer-Tropsch synthesis (FTS) suffers from catalyst deactivation. One of the main deactivation mechanisms under industrial conditions is sintering. In this work, we explored the role of manganese oxide as a structural promoter against sintering in a carbon nanofiber supported cobalt model catalyst. We employed in situ Mössbauer emission spectroscopy to study cobalt sintering in synthesis gas as a function of the steam partial pressure, which mimics high CO conversion during FTS. Steam accelerates the sintering of non-promoted metallic cobalt particles. Model experiments point to a synergistic effect between carbon monoxide and steam on cobalt sintering. In the mangense-promoted case, sintering is significantly reduced, indicative of the structural stabilization of small cobalt particles by manganese oxide. Nevertheless, a fraction of cobalt particles in close interaction with manganese oxide carburized under these conditions, resulting in a lower catalytic activity.