Influence of Precursors on the Induction Period and Transition Regime of Dimethyl Ether Conversion to Hydrocarbons over ZSM-5 Catalysts
Journal article, 2019

ZSM-5 catalysts were subjected to step response cycles of dimethyl ether (DME) at 300 °C in a temporal analysis of product (TAP) reactor. Propylene is the major olefin and displays an S-shaped profile. A 44 min induction period occurs before primary propylene formation and is reduced upon subsequent step response cycles. The S-shaped profile was interpreted according to induction, transition-regime, and steady-state stages to investigate hydrocarbon formation from DME. The influence of precursors (carbon monoxide, hydrogen, dimethoxymethane, and 1,5-hexadiene) was studied using a novel consecutive step response methodology in the TAP reactor. The addition of dimethoxymethane, carbon monoxide, hydrogen, or 1,5-hexadiene reduces the induction period of primary olefin formation. However, while dimethoxymethane, carbon monoxide, and hydrogen accelerate the transition regime toward hydrocarbon pool formation, 1,5-hexadiene attenuates it. Heavier hydrocarbons obtained from 1,5-hexadiene compete for active sites during secondary olefin formation. A phenomenological evaluation of multiple parameters is presented.

Author

Oluwatoyin Omojola

The University of Warwick

University of Bath

Dmitry Lukyanov

University of Bath

Nikolay Cherkasov

The University of Warwick

Vladimir Zholobenko

Keele University

Andre van Veen

The University of Warwick

Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research

0888-5885 (ISSN) 1520-5045 (eISSN)

Vol. 58 36 16479-16488

Subject Categories

Physical Chemistry

Chemical Engineering

DOI

10.1021/acs.iecr.9b03344

More information

Latest update

2/9/2022 8