Catalytic conversion of pure glycerol over an un-modified H-ZSM-5 zeolite to bio-based aromatics

Journal Article (2021)
Author(s)

Songbo He (University Medical Center Groningen)

Kenny Zuur (University Medical Center Groningen)

Dian Sukmayanda Santosa (University Medical Center Groningen)

Andre Heeres (Hanze Hogeschool Groningen, Bio-BTX B.V.)

Chuncheng Liu (TU Delft - ChemE/Inorganic Systems Engineering)

E.A. Pidko (TU Delft - ChemE/Inorganic Systems Engineering, TU Delft - ChemE/Algemeen)

Hero Heeres (University Medical Center Groningen)

Research Group
ChemE/Inorganic Systems Engineering
Copyright
© 2021 Songbo He, Kenny Zuur, Dian Sukmayanda Santosa, Andre Heeres, C. Liu, E.A. Pidko, Hero Jan Heeres
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apcatb.2020.119467
More Info
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Publication Year
2021
Language
English
Copyright
© 2021 Songbo He, Kenny Zuur, Dian Sukmayanda Santosa, Andre Heeres, C. Liu, E.A. Pidko, Hero Jan Heeres
Research Group
ChemE/Inorganic Systems Engineering
Volume number
281
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Abstract

The catalytic conversion of pure glycerol to bio-aromatics (bio-BTX) over an un-modified H-ZSM-5 (SiO2/Al2O3 molar ratio of 23) via an ex-situ catalytic pyrolysis approach in a continuous tandem-micro reactor at a scale of 1 g glycerol h−1 was investigated. A BTX peak carbon yield of 28.1 ± 0.2 % was obtained at a pyrolysis temperature of 400 °C, catalytic upgrading temperature of 500 °C, atmospheric pressure and a WHSV of 1 h−1. About 70 % of the bound oxygen in glycerol was converted to water. The latter was mainly formed in the catalytic upgrading unit (70 %), though conversion of glycerol to other oxygenates with water formation was also observed in the pyrolysis unit. Catalyst deactivation occurs at a time scale of hours and is mainly due to coke deposition (12.0 wt.%) on the catalyst surface. An oxidative regeneration procedure to remove coke was applied and 5 cycles of reaction-regeneration were performed successfully, though a drop in activity was observed after each cycle due to irreversible catalyst deactivation. Characterization of the fresh, deactivated and regenerated catalysts by various techniques revealed dealumination of the H-ZSM-5 framework and resulted in a dramatic decrease in Brønsted acidity of the catalyst. Dealumination mainly occurred in the catalytic upgrading reactor and to a by far lesser extent during catalyst regeneration. This information is relevant for a better understanding of the process on a molecular level but also for scale-up studies, e.g. for the design of pilot plants.