Substituting Chromium in Iron-Based Catalysts for the High-Temperature Water-Gas Shift Reaction

Journal Article (2022)
Author(s)

M.I. Ariëns (TU Delft - RST/Radiation, Science and Technology, Eindhoven University of Technology, TU Delft - RST/Fundamental Aspects of Materials and Energy)

L.G.A. van de Water (Johnson Matthey Technology Center)

AI Dugulan (TU Delft - RID/TS/Instrumenten groep, TU Delft - RST/Fundamental Aspects of Materials and Energy)

EH Brück (TU Delft - RST/Fundamental Aspects of Materials and Energy)

Emiel J M Hensen (Eindhoven University of Technology)

Department
RST/Radiation, Science and Technology
Copyright
© 2022 M.I. Ariëns, L. G.A. Van De Water, A.I. Dugulan, E.H. Brück, E. J.M. Hensen
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1021/acscatal.2c03871
More Info
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Publication Year
2022
Language
English
Copyright
© 2022 M.I. Ariëns, L. G.A. Van De Water, A.I. Dugulan, E.H. Brück, E. J.M. Hensen
Department
RST/Radiation, Science and Technology
Issue number
22
Volume number
12
Pages (from-to)
13838-13852
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Abstract

A set of doped iron oxides (chromium, aluminum, gallium, indium, manganese, zinc, niobium) were prepared by a one-step coprecipitation/calcination approach evaluated for their WGS activity under industrially relevant conditions and characterized in detail. The WGS activity after ageing the doped catalyst for 4 days at 25 bar follows the order chromium ≈ aluminum > gallium > indium > manganese > zinc > niobium for copper-codoped catalysts. The activated catalysts predominantly consist of magnetite, irrespective of the dopant. Mössbauer spectra of aged catalysts showed that aluminum and zinc occupy both tetrahedral and octahedral sites of magnetite, while chromium, gallium, indium, manganese, and niobium preferentially substitute octahedral iron. The incorporation of trivalent metal ions of similar size to octahedral Fe3+ (i.e., chromium, aluminum, gallium) results in moderate to high CO conversion, irrespective of incorporation in tetrahedral or octahedral sites. The substitution of Fe2+ with Mn2+ results in an increased Fe3+/Fe2+ ratio. Incorporation of Zn2+ in tetrahedral sites (replacing Fe3+ ions) leads to a complex structure where the charge balance is compensated from the octahedral sites. Separate dopant metal oxide phases were observed in indium- and niobium-doped catalysts. XPS shows that copper is present as a separate phase in activated copper-codoped catalysts. Aluminum is identified as the most promising promoter for substituting chromium in commercial high-temperature WGS catalysts on the basis of their similar high CO conversion although incorporation of these dopants into the magnetite structure differed substantially.